ea of 3 MIT men are astronauts Institute Commifee plans ...tech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N20.pdf · io...

16
io id ea of bounds' Institute Commifee plans new weekend for spring Vol. 83, No. 20 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963 5c Cyclotron modernized .~~~~I aI ' I-_I Ir_ -- 'N I 1 I tz ] 1 c ¢ ] tions for Saturday included hav- ing a train ride to the White mmailns, with mausic providel on the way by rock and roll bands. A second suggestion was to have a boat trip up the coast of New England. There is a "strong possibility" that the Weekend will be subsi- dized by the Finance Board, ac- cording to Jerry Luebbers. This will mean that ticket prices will be at a minimum while the cal- iber of the entertainment and activities will not be reduced. Luebbers emphasized that this year's Spring Weekend should not have the problems of previous second term weekends, because of its originality, timing, and realistic budgeting. Iat year's Winter Weekend had a deficit of over $1,000 while' the weekend of the year before had a $5500 deficit. Inscomm will elect a seven- man weekend committee to carry oat and finalize all plans. Since Inscomm envisages {his as an an- nual event, the committee is making plans to hold school-wide elections for the Spring Weekend Committee in the future. Persns interested in runtnng for this year's Committee should contact Betty Hendricks in Litch- field Lounge for an apponent. iT will hold a Sprng Week- end next term, April 17-20. The weekend, initiated by an Institute Committee resolution last Thurs- day, is in the initial playming stages. Commenting, "No idea is out of baMIs," Jerry Luebbers '64, Undergraduate Association Presi- dent, stressed ithat the Weekend will be something different, pos- sbly similar to Centennial Week- end. It will not be a second J.P. but will, instead, Iomplement the Junior Prom, Luebbers added. In support of the weekend, the Interfraternty (oerfexren voted aimst }w-,'ning its ovm se- ond term social event. The idea for the Weekend was initiated by the Institute Commit- tee. Among the possibilities sug- gested at the Inscomm meeting was to have an ifortmal affair, Friday night, possibly at an out- of-Boston country club. Sugges- Faculty committee favors Stratton giving tommencement speech Elimination of an outside speaker at Commrencement is be- ing favored by the faculty cmn- mittee responsible for commence- ment planning. The committee proposes having President Julius Stratton deliver the main address. The committee has also decided to eliminate the baccalaureate sennon and replace it 'by another event on the first day of the two- day commencement exercises. Discussion of these moves took place at the Irnstitute Committee meeting last Thursday, October 17. Last year Eugene R Black former president of the Interna tional Bank for Reconsruetioi r and Development, delivered the conmencement address. This was followed by a five minute ad dress and the awarding of di plomas by President Stratton. To replace the baccalaureate senrmon, a religiously oriented ceremony on the first day o commencement, the faculty cornm mittee has considered having a panel discussion or bringing in a speaker to deliver a special sec ond address. According to Steve Glassman '64, the faculty is interested I airing student opinion on all o these proposals. The Ingfittt Conmmittee meeting, added Glass man, provided -the perfect settin] for such discussion. MIT Freceives two contracts fromgovernmen' No research arnd &_qe1%xn clts toitaf $2,031,700 we] awmxkd to mbrl, ocawxer 15. A! .uremret of «se award cesm in Waszgh nrum Sendra Ed ad Kennedy and Lerett Sal cMsall and Cosgretman Th7orn O'Neill. The first Imntrac for $2 mi liea, was ;arited by th~e A: FbrIe for iprovement of inert: mvigational tteanques for bag// ti geae anmV Vhe Dep nt of Interti awwted te second tract t sldy tMe sepotion of salt frro izen sea water. eran and accomplished jet pilot, is currently en- ployed as a research scientist by the Experimen- tal Astronomy Laboratory of the MIT Division of Sponsored Research. He graduated from MIT in 19-$ with a bachelor's degree from the Depart- mernt of Aeronautics and Abtrnautics and sub- sequerdtly worked as a teaching assistant in Ccurses XVI. He later served as a fighter pilot in the Air Force for five years and still ffies on weekends as a captain in the Massachusetts Air National Guard. In 1963 he received a Course XVI Master of Science degree. At 27 he is the youngest of the fourteen candidates and one of two divilians in the group. "Ever since I can remember, I've looked at the moon and wanted to go there," he told re- porters in Houston after the announcement. "I think this moon program is 'the most exci'ing thing that this or any country has done in sev- eral centuries." He indicated (that he hoped the moon shot program would be largely of a scierfic Fresh data-gathering nature. F s Major Aldrin received a doctor- ate in Course XVI His year for Dick Chant work in guidance techniques for Cmuncil. 01her manned orbital rendezvous. Henry, Secreta .S...- _. - ."-M.I s_ of M _ B't Onm Russell L. Schweickart takes a break from work. Schweickart was recently selected as one of 14 new astronauts. his Sctn. Leader Alterrnte William Vail (DKE) Melvin Snyder (AEPi) Donald Raab (.DTD) David Diamond (SAMI) Larry Silverman (PiLP) John Ryder (BTPi) Edward Kirsh (Bur) WUlia Gloek (PDT) Harvey Golnmb (AEPi) George Sacerdete (CP) Garland Taylor (DTD)' Chlfford Lawrence (PMD), Paul Caragine (Baker) Thomas Sharon (PDT) Jambes Dotson (Bur) Richard Bails (SAE) Neil Steimmetz (EC)) Donald Hodges (DTD) Thomas Newkirk (DU) Jeffrey Wiesen (Baker) Jan Carlson (Student) VWiliam Elmer (Bur) Richard Habenan (CP) James Gruhl (Bur) Edward Geltman Jefnney Schoenwald Richard Gostyla (DU) Jonathan Sussman (SAM) Mike Kruger (LCA) -John Paterson (PDT) Edward Radio (Bur) Louis o0fin (ZBT) 1 Spencer Sheman (AEPi) 2 Paul Goldstein (ZBT) 3 Robert Smith (DU) 4 Gerald Tnmanek (BTPi) 5 James Small (Bur) 6 James Sandusky (IDTD) 7 Douglas Benson (ATO) 8 Paavo Pyykkonen (EC) 9 Charles Kolb (EC) 10 Giorgio Piceagli (Baker) 11 Donald Batchelor (SAE) 12 Brook Landis (PDT) 13 William Flor (LCA) 14 David Howell (PDT) 15 Robert Bosler (DTD) 16 Steve Douglas (Bur) 17 Results not reported S James Triant (SAE) 19 Stanley Liu (Apt) 20 Hossein Askari (EC) 21 Stuart McLeod (SAE) 22 Jodie Ray (DKE) 23 Alan Colavano (Bur) 24 David Gorenstein (A-Pi) 25 Dudley Booth (SN) 26 Aien Landers (ZBT) 27 Kenneth FAmn (AEPi) 28 Robert Biake (SAE) 29 Stephen Marcus (Bak) 30 Roy Garnse (AEPi) 31 James Moorer (PKS) 32 Jay Davr'dow (AEPi) 33 David Kress (TC) 34 Benjamin White (PLP) 35 James Swamon (PSK) Evans and his group also em- ployed radioactive iron from the cyclotron to develop ACD-4, which is now used throughout the United States to preserve wrhole blood. MIT physicists will now be able to undertake new experiments that were previously limited by space considerations. One of the first that will be undertaken is time-of-flight experiments in which energies of accelerated nuclear (Please turn to page I3) By Bill JAudnick Modernization of the M[T cy- clotron at a cost of $583,000 has recently been completed. The im- proved facility will enable MIT physicists to perform a wide num- ber of new experiments. The year of rebuilding and im- provements for the research fa- cility of the Laboratory for Nuc- lear Science was financed by a ?333,000 grant from US Atomic Energy Commission, and the bal- ance from MIT. Laboratory staff members, working closely with MIT's Physi- cal Plant, suggested four basic improvements: larger target areas around the cyclotron itself; better focussing of the beam of sub- atomic partiicles; expanded gene- ral research laboratories; and the addition of a modern radiochem- istry laboratory. The moadeniz cyclotron will be particularly useful in perfornm- ing nuclear experiments at inter- mediate energies. It can produce 7.5 Mev proton streams, 15.0 Mev deuteron beams, and 30.0 Mev alpha particles. To handle the ex- panded range of experimental possibilities, the staff of the Lab- oratory has doubled in size. The faciity has, in the past, produced significant advances m the areas of isotope production In the early 1940's, Professor Robley D. Evans developed the iodine-13 used for diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disorders. Professor Other matters discussed at the meeting included a progress re- port on the Council's forthcoming booklet on facilities available to activities. A discussion on a pro- posal to consolidate the informa- tion contained in various hand- books and guides currently being published by different organiza- tions throughout the Institute was also discussed. and provide recognition for those groups and individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the activities at MIT was consid- ered and voted favorably upon at the meeting. This program, not yet planned in detail, will consist of soliciting mominations from members of the MIT community, and selecting award winners by means of a screening committee. Activities Provisional Council has granted Class B status to 2 new student organizations. The Council, at its meeting last IThurs- day also voted in favor of the awards program proposed by the Activities Development Board. Granted provisional Class B status were the MIT Students for Goldwater and the MIT Chapter of the Young Americans for Free- dom. Provisional Class B status en- titles these groups to use the bul- letin boards, booths in building 10. and other Institute facilities for a period of one year. If, at the end of one year their affairs are in order, they will become perma- nent Class B activities if they so desire. An awards program to stimu- late student interest in activities 3 MIT men are astronauts By Bill Byrn TWree MITtrained men are among the fourteen who have been rnamed by 'He National Aero- nautics and Space Adminibstration as new candidates too undergo trainrg for America's marn-o-the- moon program. 'hey are Russell L. Schweickart '56, who earned an S.M. degree in 1963, Majo Edwin E. Al- alin, Jr., who received a doctorate in 1963, andCaptain David R. Soot, USAF, who was awarded the S.M. and Degree of Engineer in 1962. . · IThe 14 new Itrainees will begin a broad program of tra'inig and development in the moon- s.ht effort. This effort is currently directed towards landing an Amercan on the moon by 1970. Much of the taining wil1 be done at the NASA manned spacecraft center in Houston, Texas. Schweickaet, an experiened Air Fore vets- F i £l, -IIeIlml L.UUJ representatives Council elects officers dler has been elected President of the Freshman officers are: Ben Wlhite, Vice-presidenrt, and Karen Lry-Treasurer. The elections were held at the firSt ncil meeting, Sunday evening, October 20. iThe 35 and their alternates are: 2 polifical groups given Class B status INDEX Cherchez la Femme .............. . 4 College World .......................... 7 Critic's Choice .......... ............. 9 Editorialse ......................- .4 Enerfainmen ........ .. 81 inside Insconmn ...................... - 4 Eibider IsO ........................ 4 ~fetatenf ................. 4' Peanuts ................................ 4 SPores ........... .... ............ 5-16 i MIT Undergraduate Fund Drive seeks confributions totaling $1700 The MIT Undergraduate Fund Drive bs seit a goal of $1700, to be collected by October 25. The Drive is jointly administered by the Techrolegy Community Association and Alpha Phi Omega. Co-:hairmen of the Drive are Gardner Gay'65 and John Klensin '66 of APO, and Diane Macunovich '66 of TCA. Participatng chari- ties are the World University Service and the Urnted Fund.

Transcript of ea of 3 MIT men are astronauts Institute Commifee plans ...tech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N20.pdf · io...

io id ea of bounds'

Institute Commifee plansnew weekend for spring

Vol. 83, No. 20 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963 5c

Cyclotron modernized

.~~~~I aI

' I-_I Ir_ --

'N

I

1

I

tz

]1

c

¢

]

tions for Saturday included hav-ing a train ride to the White

mmailns, with mausic providel onthe way by rock and roll bands.A second suggestion was to havea boat trip up the coast of NewEngland.

There is a "strong possibility"that the Weekend will be subsi-dized by the Finance Board, ac-cording to Jerry Luebbers. Thiswill mean that ticket prices willbe at a minimum while the cal-iber of the entertainment andactivities will not be reduced.Luebbers emphasized that thisyear's Spring Weekend should nothave the problems of previoussecond term weekends, becauseof its originality, timing, andrealistic budgeting.

Iat year's Winter Weekendhad a deficit of over $1,000 while'the weekend of the year beforehad a $5500 deficit.

Inscomm will elect a seven-man weekend committee to carryoat and finalize all plans. SinceInscomm envisages {his as an an-nual event, the committee ismaking plans to hold school-wideelections for the Spring WeekendCommittee in the future.

Persns interested in runtnngfor this year's Committee shouldcontact Betty Hendricks in Litch-field Lounge for an apponent.

iT will hold a Sprng Week-end next term, April 17-20. Theweekend, initiated by an InstituteCommittee resolution last Thurs-day, is in the initial playmingstages.

Commenting, "No idea is out ofbaMIs," Jerry Luebbers '64,Undergraduate Association Presi-dent, stressed ithat the Weekendwill be something different, pos-sbly similar to Centennial Week-end. It will not be a second J.P.but will, instead, Iomplement theJunior Prom, Luebbers added.

In support of the weekend, theInterfraternty (oerfexren votedaimst }w-,'ning its ovm se-

ond term social event.The idea for the Weekend was

initiated by the Institute Commit-tee. Among the possibilities sug-gested at the Inscomm meetingwas to have an ifortmal affair,Friday night, possibly at an out-of-Boston country club. Sugges-

Faculty committeefavors Stratton givingtommencement speech

Elimination of an outsidespeaker at Commrencement is be-ing favored by the faculty cmn-mittee responsible for commence-ment planning. The committeeproposes having President JuliusStratton deliver the main address.

The committee has also decidedto eliminate the baccalaureatesennon and replace it 'by anotherevent on the first day of the two-day commencement exercises.

Discussion of these moves tookplace at the Irnstitute Committeemeeting last Thursday, October17.

Last year Eugene R Blackformer president of the International Bank for Reconsruetioi rand Development, delivered theconmencement address. This wasfollowed by a five minute address and the awarding of diplomas by President Stratton.

To replace the baccalaureatesenrmon, a religiously orientedceremony on the first day ocommencement, the faculty cornmmittee has considered having apanel discussion or bringing in aspeaker to deliver a special second address.

According to Steve Glassman'64, the faculty is interested Iairing student opinion on all othese proposals. The IngfitttConmmittee meeting, added Glassman, provided -the perfect settin]for such discussion.

MIT Freceivestwo contractsfromgovernmen'

No research arnd &_qe1%xnclts toitaf $2,031,700 we]

awmxkd to mbrl, ocawxer 15. A!.uremret of «se award cesm

in Waszgh nrum Sendra Edad Kennedy and Lerett Sal

cMsall and Cosgretman Th7ornO'Neill.

The first Imntrac for $2 miliea, was ;arited by th~e A:FbrIe for iprovement of inert:mvigational tteanques for bag//ti geae anmV

Vhe Dep nt of Intertiawwted te second tract tsldy tMe sepotion of salt frroizen sea water.

eran and accomplished jet pilot, is currently en-

ployed as a research scientist by the Experimen-tal Astronomy Laboratory of the MIT Division ofSponsored Research. He graduated from MIT in19-$ with a bachelor's degree from the Depart-mernt of Aeronautics and Abtrnautics and sub-sequerdtly worked as a teaching assistant inCcurses XVI.

He later served as a fighter pilot in the AirForce for five years and still ffies on weekendsas a captain in the Massachusetts Air NationalGuard. In 1963 he received a Course XVI Masterof Science degree. At 27 he is the youngest ofthe fourteen candidates and one of two diviliansin the group.

"Ever since I can remember, I've looked atthe moon and wanted to go there," he told re-porters in Houston after the announcement. "Ithink this moon program is 'the most exci'ingthing that this or any country has done in sev-eral centuries." He indicated (thathe hoped the moon shot programwould be largely of a scierfic Freshdata-gathering nature. F s

Major Aldrin received a doctor-ate in Course XVI His year for Dick Chantwork in guidance techniques for Cmuncil. 01hermanned orbital rendezvous. Henry, Secreta

.S...- _. - ."-M.I s_ of M _ B't Onm

Russell L. Schweickart takes a break fromwork. Schweickart was recently selected as

one of 14 new astronauts.his

Sctn. Leader AlterrnteWilliam Vail (DKE)

Melvin Snyder (AEPi)Donald Raab (.DTD)

David Diamond (SAMI)Larry Silverman (PiLP)

John Ryder (BTPi)Edward Kirsh (Bur)WUlia Gloek (PDT)

Harvey Golnmb (AEPi)George Sacerdete (CP)Garland Taylor (DTD)'

Chlfford Lawrence (PMD),Paul Caragine (Baker)Thomas Sharon (PDT)

Jambes Dotson (Bur)Richard Bails (SAE)

Neil Steimmetz (EC))Donald Hodges (DTD)

Thomas Newkirk (DU)Jeffrey Wiesen (Baker)Jan Carlson (Student)VWiliam Elmer (Bur)

Richard Habenan (CP)James Gruhl (Bur)

Edward GeltmanJefnney Schoenwald

Richard Gostyla (DU)Jonathan Sussman (SAM)

Mike Kruger (LCA)-John Paterson (PDT)

Edward Radio (Bur)Louis o0fin (ZBT)

1 Spencer Sheman (AEPi)2 Paul Goldstein (ZBT)3 Robert Smith (DU)4 Gerald Tnmanek (BTPi)5 James Small (Bur)6 James Sandusky (IDTD)7 Douglas Benson (ATO)8 Paavo Pyykkonen (EC)9 Charles Kolb (EC)

10 Giorgio Piceagli (Baker)11 Donald Batchelor (SAE)12 Brook Landis (PDT)13 William Flor (LCA)14 David Howell (PDT)15 Robert Bosler (DTD)16 Steve Douglas (Bur)17 Results not reportedS James Triant (SAE)

19 Stanley Liu (Apt)20 Hossein Askari (EC)21 Stuart McLeod (SAE)22 Jodie Ray (DKE)23 Alan Colavano (Bur)24 David Gorenstein (A-Pi)25 Dudley Booth (SN)26 Aien Landers (ZBT)27 Kenneth FAmn (AEPi)28 Robert Biake (SAE)29 Stephen Marcus (Bak)30 Roy Garnse (AEPi)31 James Moorer (PKS)32 Jay Davr'dow (AEPi)33 David Kress (TC)34 Benjamin White (PLP)35 James Swamon (PSK)

Evans and his group also em-ployed radioactive iron from thecyclotron to develop ACD-4, whichis now used throughout the UnitedStates to preserve wrhole blood.

MIT physicists will now be ableto undertake new experimentsthat were previously limited byspace considerations. One of thefirst that will be undertaken istime-of-flight experiments in whichenergies of accelerated nuclear

(Please turn to page I3)

By Bill JAudnickModernization of the M[T cy-

clotron at a cost of $583,000 hasrecently been completed. The im-proved facility will enable MITphysicists to perform a wide num-ber of new experiments.

The year of rebuilding and im-provements for the research fa-cility of the Laboratory for Nuc-lear Science was financed by a

?333,000 grant from US AtomicEnergy Commission, and the bal-ance from MIT.

Laboratory staff members,working closely with MIT's Physi-cal Plant, suggested four basicimprovements: larger target areasaround the cyclotron itself; betterfocussing of the beam of sub-atomic partiicles; expanded gene-ral research laboratories; and theaddition of a modern radiochem-istry laboratory.

The moadeniz cyclotron willbe particularly useful in perfornm-ing nuclear experiments at inter-mediate energies. It can produce7.5 Mev proton streams, 15.0 Mevdeuteron beams, and 30.0 Mevalpha particles. To handle the ex-panded range of experimentalpossibilities, the staff of the Lab-oratory has doubled in size.

The faciity has, in the past,produced significant advances mthe areas of isotope production Inthe early 1940's, Professor RobleyD. Evans developed the iodine-13used for diagnosis and treatmentof thyroid disorders. Professor

Other matters discussed at themeeting included a progress re-port on the Council's forthcomingbooklet on facilities available toactivities. A discussion on a pro-posal to consolidate the informa-tion contained in various hand-books and guides currently beingpublished by different organiza-tions throughout the Institute wasalso discussed.

and provide recognition for thosegroups and individuals who havemade outstanding contributions tothe activities at MIT was consid-ered and voted favorably upon atthe meeting. This program, notyet planned in detail, will consistof soliciting mominations frommembers of the MIT community,and selecting award winners bymeans of a screening committee.

Activities Provisional Council

has granted Class B status to 2new student organizations. TheCouncil, at its meeting last IThurs-day also voted in favor of theawards program proposed by theActivities Development Board.

Granted provisional Class Bstatus were the MIT Students forGoldwater and the MIT Chapterof the Young Americans for Free-dom.

Provisional Class B status en-titles these groups to use the bul-letin boards, booths in building 10.and other Institute facilities for aperiod of one year. If, at the endof one year their affairs are inorder, they will become perma-nent Class B activities if they sodesire.

An awards program to stimu-late student interest in activities

3 MIT men are astronautsBy Bill Byrn

TWree MITtrained men are among the fourteen who have been rnamed by 'He National Aero-nautics and Space Adminibstration as new candidates too undergo trainrg for America's marn-o-the-moon program.

'hey are Russell L. Schweickart '56, who earned an S.M. degree in 1963, Majo Edwin E. Al-alin, Jr., who received a doctorate in 1963, andCaptain David R. Soot, USAF, who was awardedthe S.M. and Degree of Engineer in 1962. .

· IThe 14 new Itrainees will begin a broad program of tra'inig and development in the moon-s.ht effort. This effort is currently directed towards landing an Amercan on the moon by 1970.Much of the taining wil1 be done at the NASA manned spacecraft center in Houston, Texas.

Schweickaet, an experiened Air Fore vets- F i

£l, -IIeIlml L.UUJ

representatives

Council elects officersdler has been elected President of the Freshmanofficers are: Ben Wlhite, Vice-presidenrt, and Karen

Lry-Treasurer. The elections were held at the firStncil meeting, Sunday evening, October 20. iThe 35and their alternates are:

2 polifical groups given Class B status

INDEXCherchez la Femme .............. . 4College World .......................... 7Critic's Choice .......... ............. 9

Editorialse ......................- .4Enerfainmen ........ .. 81inside Insconmn ...................... - 4Eibider IsO ........................ 4~fetatenf ................. 4'

Peanuts ................................ 4SPores ........... .... ............ 5-16 i

MIT Undergraduate Fund Driveseeks confributions totaling $1700

The MIT Undergraduate Fund Drive bs seit a goal of $1700, tobe collected by October 25. The Drive is jointly administered bythe Techrolegy Community Association and Alpha Phi Omega.

Co-:hairmen of the Drive are Gardner Gay'65 and John Klensin'66 of APO, and Diane Macunovich '66 of TCA. Participatng chari-ties are the World University Service and the Urnted Fund.

Cl

By Lydia CastleThat psychology has always oc-

- cupied a signficant niche atMo M.I.T. rIs beyond question. ,But itis only Within the past two yearsthat Psychology as a disciplinehas become concentrated in asingle care program.

' In la recent itberview with the° Tech, Dr. Hans-Lucas Teubr,O Professor of Psywlogy andO Chairman of the Section, des-

n clii!bes this program as a three-< pronged approach wich comn-

bkines the physical and social sci-LuI ences.Z 'IStated very briefly, the three

"prongs" are the pysioiogical,the clissical experimental, andthe social-developmental branchesof the field.

IPhysi'ological psychology is con-cerned with the Ibrain and be-

o havior; for rintance, with the ef-LU fects of brain injury or brain

stimulation upon 'behavior. Fac-I ulty awd graduate students 'are-- presently carryhg out expeTi-

merts dealing with removal ofparts of the brain, with lectro-sminuladion and recording, andwith chemial manipulaftion of thebrain.

Sensorimotor FunctionThe field of experimental psy-

By IRon Randall

The railway crossing gate hadbeen down for some time now asour driver pulled our bus up 'be-hind a cov-cart and killed themotor. We strained to see, butsawr no train, as an ungainly tailof bullock carts, oars, lorries,tempoos, and horsedrawn tongasslovly grew behind us. Five rnmin-utes passed; ten; a quarter of anhour-and still no train in sight.

Some of the bike riders werecasually skirting the gates andwalking their bikes across thetracks. The patient horde of men,machines, and animals, swelter-ing in the hundred-degree heat,sat quietly, wvatdhing, waititng.Twenty minutes passed, thentwenty-five, and still no train.When will it come?

It never did, you see, for .thegates squeaked upwards at last,with about as much purpose intieiT motion as there had beenin their prior stillness. The rmo-

in psychology

The small animal in the cageheld by graduate student Ger-ald Schneider looks like a squir-rel but was recently reclassifiedas a primate.

-Photos by Stephen Teicher

chclogy, here at the Institute, isaoncerned largdy with studies ofperception and learnig. 'Specialemphasis is Phlaced on the organ-ization of the sensornimotor fumc-tion.

PrOblems in the early stages ofacquriring language, lbgic and so-dial attitudes a're probed in thesoci-develpm ental 'area. Somestudies in thlis field attempt todiscover the perceptual structuresof early dhi1dhood.

tors -were started, the 'bullocks,cows, and ponies urged on, asthe massive lines slowly drewawray and crept across thfie tracks.

There was no impatience tospeed up, tomake up for 4 ' =lost tirne, justas there hadbeen no annoy-ance at thisrather routinedelay. For this i~ 'took place near .:3¢New Delhi, and ~'i '

thmis o f t en Randallwork out this way in India-everyone is used to it.

The traditional Indian culture isindeed a strange one to a visit-ing Americar--and yet thought-ful comparisons with our own donot always yield a condemnationof the alien. In fact, the3y occa-sionally pose some tough ques-tions to even the staunchest up-holder of the American Way.

outlinedThis three-prmnged approadh

permits each of the 15 newly-ar-rived Ph.D. candidates to special-ize in one or two of the fieldswhiceh interests him most. Thereare graduate seminars and ,lab-oratories devoted to each ofthe three areas.

According to Prof. Teuber,these students are exposed. "torathe r unoxthodOx training."There is only one requiredcourse, the Proseminar, 'limitedto first year gradUate students.This Proseminar is a doubleccurse of considerable readitgand dcass discussion which- shouldfit the student for more advancedtraining. This subsequent trainingis essentially 'an apprenticeshipexperience, with an ,iformrnal se-quterce of semirnars and 1abora-tory projects.

Three TopicsThe undergraduate program in

plsych'elogy is also oiganizedaround the three central topics.After completing Ithe introductorycourse, the studeart may study asequence of subjects, w.ith 5 or6 offered in eacdh area.

In addition to the grafdate andundergraduate teaching and re-seardh progrnams, the Psychdlogy

This summer I *had the rareprtivilege of spending two monthsin the land of the 'M'aharajahs asa participant in 'the World Uni-vErsity Service-YWCA Asian Sem-ninar. Ccordinated thru the inter-national WUS organization, thisexperiment in internmational edu-ca'tion gathered students and pro-fessors from all over the U.S. ina study-tour of Japan, HongKcng, and India.

The trip was financed complete-ly by the U.S. State Dept. andthe individual participants, and Icwe an immeasurable debt cfgratitude to the InStitute Commit-tee and The Baker Memo'rialCommittee for helping me meetmy obligations and making myparticipation possible.

This is the first of a series' ofarticles in Which I shall try toconvey the excitement of learn-ing about a culture so fascinatingand so different from our ownthat we cannot help but learn agreat deal about ourselves.

by

Eugenia Norris, research as-sistant, handles stump- tailedmacaque, one of several animaisthat she works with-daily. Themacaque is naturally tame incontrast to many of the othermonkeys.

department sponsors a series ofColloGquia of guest speakers and'special seminars. These are fre-querntly taken over by distin-guished visitorS fIom abroad.

As nearly all other departmentsat M.I.T., Psychology often hasguests from Iron Curtain coun-tries. There is also a particularlyextensive and fruitful exchangewith psychologists from Oxfordand Cambridge.

To facilitate the growth of Psy-

Decorators remove beetles

Resfyling completed in Stratton - Killian office complex

·- .x *5 . .

.'O ", , , , ^,4

By Lydia Castle

As snug as a ,bug in a rug isan expressfio usuly related tocollegiate football fields. ,Not soat MIT. It is a wehl-knoln factthat at the InstitUte nothing issamed. This apparently extendsto the Corporate OffiCes as 'Pres-ident Stratton's rug uas found tobe ,housing a family of carpetbeetles last spring.

Since a remodelling job wasalready on the agenda, discoveryof the beetles merely showed howlong overdue the renovati:on was.Plans were drawn up by Prof.Herert L. Belwith, dcairman of

the A crfitecture Department withthe assiitce of Richard C.Reece, of BedkWith's archltedtuwr-al finn. Work started on July 1.

For the following two monthscarpenters hanrnered a wa ybreaking down dd walls andbuiding new ones, and Pres.Stratton mmed his office to Build-ing 10.

Japanese Fig Tree

A bevy ,f typists is no longerthe focal point as one enters theOffices . Beyond a pair cf hand-some, deeply recessed teak doors,is a cool, spaciouls waiting room.The waiting room has teakwl odchairs upholstered in black ox-nide leather. The Japanese figtree ard a cmntinuou!1y blessom-'ing oleander shrub has replacedthe clicking of typewriters. Twogallery4-ike passagels lead to theoffice of Chairmaan Kill'ian orPres. Stratton ats the Teceptionistannounces the Visitor's presence

The new Stratton-Killian officecomplex features recently in-stalled teak doors (left) and re-furnished waiting room (right).Below is a view of PresidentStratton's desk.

-Photos byJohn C. Rylaarsdam

over a new call-director system.The arhiitectural design called

for extensive rearrangement ofthe partitions within the existingspace. Mr. Reece explained thatthe 31/2 foot walls flanking theentrance corridor were ldesignedto give a screen of privacy forthe President and the Chairman.They also conceal a ccat closeLt.In an effort to improrve workingarrangements, the adminiistrativeassistants hee been placeld inalcoves adjacent to the mrnin of-fices.

Luminous CeilingChairman Killian's office is es-

sentially the same as it has ,beensince the days of Dr. Compton,but extensive dhangees werewrought in President Stratton'sroom. One wal has been pan:elledin teak veneer to match the con-ference table, also newly refinish-ed in teak. Above the ftable is alarge luminous ceiling. Alternateswitching of flourescent lamps

permits a ighting intensity ofone-third, two-thirds, or ull-on.This panel, 'constructed of cor-rugated diffusing plastic pelrfor-ated Wi'th tiny holes is, accord-ing to Mr. Reece, completelysmond-absorbing.

It was not ascertained whetheror not the lbeetles bad a newhome.

Teuber2holog, the Institute udertook toreamstruct the old Cero-Assernm.bly Prant into the modern, fulyequipped E-10 building. prof.Marvin Goody of M.I.T.'s Arch.itecture Dept. served as mainarbiter of the aritectural de-velopment, but Prof. TIleuber re-vealed that several fPycholoyfacutty. nmnbers as well as hisown wife had helped witl theinterior decorating!

Animal ColonyThe building s comnpletely air-

cnditibned, perhaps 'as much forthe sake of the electro-physiolog.rical equpment and experimentalanimils as for #he faculty andstuderlts.

Familty offices, seminar roomsand the speciaized Psydhology li-brary are located on the firstfloor. Laboratories for the workin rorall and abnormal brainstructures and experimentation onvision, hearing and tactile per-ception occupy tfihe second.

On the top floor we find oneof the Institute's largest animalclonies. Its inhabitants ranlgefrom the standby rhesus-monk-eys, eats, rats 'and micee to thevery gentle stump-tailed macaqueand various species of birds.

'New AdditionTe Mnst recent addition is an

extremely rare Indonesian treeshrew (Tupaia glis), long thoughtto ,beolng to the insecivores. Zoo-logists have recently promotedthe tree shremws to the primateorder, and experimentalfion is un-dermy at M.I.T. to determinewhether the animal does in factbehave like a monkey in itsleaning processes.

This entire spetrMtn of activi-ties is successful chiefly becauseeach of the faculty members isessentially an expert in hi.S field.

Dr. Teuber expressed gratifica-tion in the fact that so many ofthe older departments have beenso hospitable to Psychology. Theconsiderable overlap between thethird prong (social-developmentalpsychology) and linguistics hasled, for example, to the jointcponsorshilp of seminars and grad-uate students. Similar cooqpra.tion is taking place with regardto Philosophy and Biology, par.ticularly in the area of neurophy-siology.

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Positions with Potential

- ENGINEERS eCHEMISTS PHYSICISTSCeramic · Chemical . Civil

Electrical - Industrial · MechanicalMetallurgical

America's leading manufacturer of carbon and graph-ite products offers positions to qualified B.S. and M.S.graduates in the fields listed above.

Our products include graphite anodes, electrocmotor and generator brushes, arc carbons and spe'graphite shapes used in nuclear, missile, and a wvariety of industrial applications.

We serve such key industries as aerospace, alunum, automotive, chemical, mining, motion pictunuclear, steel, transportation, and the electrical mafacturers.

Positions are available at 12 plants and laboratolocated in Ohio, New York, West Virginia and 1nessee and also in our Marketing organization wlcovers the 50 states from seven key cities.

Interesting, rewarding careers are offered insearch, process and product development, producand methods engineering, product and process conmachine development, plant engineering, markettechnical sales and technical service.

A representative will be on campus:

November 7 and 8

Ucar UNION CARBIDE CORPORCARBON PRODUCTS DIVISI(

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The other side of fhe world

Traditionally slIw pace of Indian life surprises visitor

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Forty-eight EE students electedto electrical engineering honorary

Forty-eight students-were elec-ted to the Beta Theta Chapterof Eta Kappa Nu at an electionmeetg Saturday-

All students eligible for the so-ciety must be electrical engineer-ing majirs. Juniors in 4he upperone- fifth of their class who areactive in extracurricular activi- I

EXCLUSIVE BOSTONSHOWING!

Joseph E. Levine presentsMARCELLO MASTROIANNI inMarvelous!Bold!Witty!--New YorkerMag.

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ties may be selected. A seniormust be in the upper one-quarterof his class to be eligible.

The following juniors wereselected: Thomas Barnwell,William Brody, Edward Bucher,Gabriel Chang, David Dewan,Richard Diephues, ChristopherEbbe, Howard Ellis, Gilbert Falk,Donald Fredrickson, RichardGuldi, Allen Hillman, Paul Hoff,John Holzer, William Inglis, KarlKehler, David KettUer, Manmo-han Khanma, Arjeh Kurtzig,James L a r s e n, Jesse Lipcon,Burt Lowry, Mark Medress, Jef-frey Meldman, Matt Mleziva,Edwin Moxon, Steven Rosenberg,Richard Sherman, Gregory Shaf-fer, Robert Thomas, RichardTsien, Clifford Weinstein, Pat-rick Winston.

The following seniors wereelected: Walter Anderson, Arm-and Chinchillo, Ron Cordover,John Dressier, Giovanni Franzi,John Gallant, Peter Kloumann,Warren Littlefield, Ashok Malho-tra, Thomas McNabb, StevenSchlosser, Thomas Seay, RichardSorbello, Gordon Taylor, Riich-ard Townsend.

The president of the societyis Lansing Hatfield '64. Othermajor officers for the fall termare Andrew Acterkirchen '64,Vice-President; Richard Carpen-ter '64, Treasurer; Dave Evans'64, Recording Secretary; Rich-ard Nixon, Corresponding Secre-tary; Chet Ebner, Bridge Corre-spondent.

UNICORN COFFEE HOUSE PRODUCTIONS presents

HOOTENANNY 1AT SYMIPHONY HIALL

Tickets: $2.50-$3.50-$4.50-Produced by Seven Productions

November 1 8 P.M.* Bonnie Dobson * Jackie Washington ' Len Chandler* The Irish Ramblers 0 Phil Ochs S Jose Feliciano* Jim Kweskin & Jug Band 0 New Lost City Ramblers

Nominations close Friday

Voting for JP Queen set for Oct. 28-Nov.

4W

Jane Cooper

iMary Walsh

Pat Carr '65

Lynne Van Deane

Maureen Malbeaus Diane Harman

Professor John E. Burchard,Dean of the School of Humanitiesand Social Science, has recentlyreturned from a two-month tripto West Germany, and is currentlyvisiting California. Dean Bur-chard was invited to Germany togather information on the currentstate of building and architecturein Germany today.

With his wife, he drove over

CAPITOL FORMAL SHOP

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Dori Pelkus '67 Donna Apgar

from Germany5,000 miles and visited everymajor city and site of architec-turia development in West Ger-many, taking many photographsand recording data to be used incritical writings. Dean Burchardhas already completed similarprojects on architectural devel-opment in other nations through-out the world, including Australia,Japan, Italy and Venezuela.

Graduated from MIT with thedegree of bachelor of science inarchitectural engineering in 1923,and receiving his master's in 1925,Dean Burchard has since becomeone of the best-known architectu-ral critics in the world.

He has written extensively, for

both domestic and foreign publi-cations, and was consulting editorof "The Architectural Record"from 1958 to 1961, in addition tobeing the consulting editor on ar-chitecture for the EncyclopediaBritannica.

Dean Burchard has been a con-sultant at many leading univer-sities throughout the United States.

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Take A-Steak-Break Tonighf AtTech Square House Restaurant

-I~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~~:i with your favorite damsel? At Tech Square House, just be-_ i Il hind Building 20 on Main Sfreet, you can do just that and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ..... I.. ! !,r nn, £__ L _JLI J?- - ..... ... I_' '_!__ J_ J:pay only ao.uu Tor DOot alnners, tax ana Tp incluaea.

It's true! If you and your date order the "Double SteakSpecial" any night this week, each of you will be served acomplete steak dinner plus vegetable and dessert for just$5.00. Your steaks will be 'served in an atmosphere that willmake you forget the toughest of calculus problems. Man-sizeteak tables and captains chairs, deep carpeting, floor-to-ceiling walnut panelling, and soft background music arehandsomely blended at Tech Square House to provide youwith the most carefree evening you've enjoyed since thesemester began.

Tech Square House is open Monday through Fridayfrom 7:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. Park free right at the door inthe beautiful new Technology Square complex.

Why not make that date tonight?

TE CH SQ:UAR E H U S E

THE HIGHiWAYMENSATURDAY, OCT. 26

Kresge 8:30 P.M.Tickets in Building 10

$2.00 $2.50

Cotact Lenses - PrescriptionsFilled - Glasses RepairedUNITY OPTICAL CO.

Abe Wise, Licensed Optician31 Mass. Ave. COpley 7-1571Special prices to MIT communityNearesd Optical House to M.I.T.

Dean Burchard returns

LEARN TO BOXII Se a master in theart of self-defense. Export trainers'secrets can be yours! 'No equipmentneeded. Form a Campus Boxing Clubamong your friends for fun, self-con-fidence anrd real physical fitness. Comn-plate brochure and lessons one dollar.

Send to: Physical Arts Gym, 363 Clin-ton St., Hempstead, Long Island, N.Y.

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PoliticsDuring the past month, several new

political groups have been formed oncampus. Reflecting a full range of politi-cal opinion, they are (left to right) theSocialist Club, Young Americans for

Vol. LXXXill No. 20 Oct. 23, 1963BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ................................ Tobias Zidle '63Business Manager ............. Howard Brauer '65Editor ......... ................... Jason Fane '64News Editor ................. Howard Ellis '65Sports Editor ............... Clifford Weinstein '65Entertainment Editor .............. Mona Dickson '66Photography Editor ............... Stephen Teicher '66Layout Editor .......................... Lyall Morrill '66Advertising Manager ...... .... Bernard Yaged '64

Acting Features Editor .. .... Walter Winshall '64Associate Editor .... Ronald Frashure '64Associate News Editor ......... William Judnick '65Associate Sports Editor . . .. John Reinties '66Associate Photography Editors . . . Maxim Smith '64

Conrad Grundlehner '64John Torode '66

Controller ..... . Kenneth Grace '63Assistant Controller . .... Kenneth Browning '66Treasurer ............. Malcolm Wheeler '66Circulation Manager ........... John Flick '66Office Manager . ............ David Vanderwerf

News Staff .......... .... Stephen Katzberg '65Henry Lichstein '65, David F. Nolan '65

Elaine Cravitz, Esther GlotzhoberFeatures writer . ......... John Montanus '66Entertainment Staff . . Gilberto Perez-Guillermo '64

Larry StarkPhotography Staff ... .. John Eulenberg '64

Sanford Libman '65, Joseph Baron '66Saul Mooallem '66, William Park '66

Editorial Staff Candidates .... .. Allan Green '66Chinweizy Ibekwe '67, Philip Louthan '67

News Staff Candidates ..... William Byrn '66Donald Berliner '67, Michael Comer '67

Charles Daney '67, Stuart Orkin '67Mark Rockman '67. Alan Saleski '67

Features Staff Candidate ..... Lydia CastleSports Staff Candidates . Thomas Compton '67

Richard Hoff '67. David Kress '61John Schwarz '67, Ted Trueblood '67

Charles Willman '67Entertainment Staff Candidates Joseph Lambert '66Robert Bringhurst '67, Janine Knauf '67

Paul Ness '67Photography Staff Candidates . Bo Chu '65

George Jelatis '66, William Bloomcquist '67James DeRemer '67. Steven Rife '67

John Rylaarsdarn '67, Bill Sexauer '67Managing Staff Candidates Elaine Ackles '67

James Gruhl '67, Joel Shwimer '67Business Staff Candidates Peter Denton '67

Joe LaBreche '67, Thomas Nakagami '67Donald Paul '67. James W. Triant '67

Other Staff Candidates James Foster '67James Gips '67, Stephen Marcus '67

David Ofsevit '67, Susan Pitt '67

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts.The Tech is published every Wednesday during thecollege year, except during college vacations, byThe Tech, Room 50-21 1, 142 Memorial Drive, Cam-bridge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephones area code617, 876-5855; 876-5856; 864-6900, Extension 2731.

United States mail subscription rates: $2.75 for oneyear, $4.25 for two years.

Nuts!

To the Editor:I speak as one totally indiffer-

ent Hot (or cold) Nuts and incomment on a letter to The Techconcerning Hot Nuts in the Octo-ber 16 issue, by Mr. Damian Kul-ash.

Mr. Kuslosh (sic) casts disarag-ing reflections on Hot Nuts, Dekes,people who listen to Hot Nuts,and people who want to listen toHot Nuts, and implies immaturityin theose of the latter three cate-gories, and perhaps in those ofthe first also.

Mr. Kusclosh (sic) seems todesire to bring about, ,through hisletter, a censorship of Hot Nuits,Dekes, people who . . . etc., andin this desire exhibits a failureto understand that a very basicpart of the makeup of the socialanimal is a love for vulgarity, alove for tha;t which is in dangerof being taken away, and a lovefor that of which it is said thereshould be no love.

These loves are not immature;they are normal. Mr. Kaluch (sic)in failing 'to recognize this, dis-plays an idealogical outlook thatexemplifies an imrmaturity moreserious than that with which hetrys to color Hot Nuts, Dekes,people who . .. , etc.

With apologies to Mr. Kulas'h,Bill Bennett '66

Students steamas Burton burns

I'o the Editor:Every day it "snows" at Bur-

ton House. The "snow" I speakof is large quantities of ash, rang-ing from fine white powder tolarge black flakes an inch across.It sifts into rooms and litters thegrounmd continually.

Freedom, and Students for Goldwater.These new groups probably signify

nothing more than a ripple of politicalinterest from the wave of enthusiasmgenerated by the 1964 election. But per-haps they are also an indication thatstudents here are taking a greater inter-est in the social and political implicationsof their work.

Unfortunately, many students andtechnologists feel that the burden of ethical and political decisions can betossed upon the politician's back. But inreality they do not have this option.

Technologists bear a responsibilityfor involvement in social problems be-cause 1) They are trained to tackle com- plex problems, and social problems areusually very complex. 2) They under-stand the social implications of scien- tific advances. 3) They are there by de-fault in some areas such as arms con-trol, where few other disciplines haveexpressed intereSt. Moreover by the merefact of working on a project, the tech-nical leader commits himself. Implicitlyhe is saying that either 1) in the longrun he feels that this project will do moregood than harm, or 2) he is a scoundrel.

Do your shareThere is one way for all MIT stu-

dents, regardless of political opinion, todischarge some of their social responsi-bility.

That way is to contribute to the an-nual undergraduate Charities Drive, runby TCA and APO.

The charities that have been chosenfor aid are worthy of wholehearted sup-port. They are the World UniversityService and the United Fund of GreaterBoston.

MIT students can be as generous asany others when they choose to be, andwe hope they will join to make the Chari-ties Drive a great success.

The source of this plague is was announced. Without any ex-Burton House's antiquated incin- planmtion many were turned downerators. Consisting of nothing and enied the privilege of havingmore than a burning pit and chim-ney, they create a terrific draft any of their work shown.which blows half the trash right Why were three and four pic-through the single large-mesh tures of some people shown andscreen at the top of the chimney, put up for sale, whereas manyand often while it is still in others who submitted s e v e r a flames.

Modemrn incinerators employ agas-fired burner to completelyconsume the rubbish, and con-trolled draft to keep it where itbelongs.

Recently a large piece of trashwas sucked up and jammed in themiddle of the chimney of the in-cinerator in the fourth wing. Thehot smoke was forced out the ac-cess door in the porter closet onthe first floor, and triggered anautomatic sprinkler alarm.

I understand that the Institutepays fifty per fire truck, andsince six trucks responded, 'ea;means at leant $300 was lost onaris false alarm.

Perhaps this will give addition-al evidence to the authorities oftne false eccnomy of maintainingsuch obsolete, objecionable, andciangeius facilities.

Wade Chandler '66

Fall Art Showselection questioned

'o Ithe Editor:May I enter my protest as to

the manner in wrich the recentmIT Fall AILt Show was run?Many amateur artists enteredtheir pictures and wenit to a grealtdeal of trouble to abide by spe-cdic 'instructions as to having..aeir work properly framed foracwiwng, dtc.ibothrg was said about being

judged and no panel of judgres

works of art did not have evenone piece accepted? Would it nothave been better to accept onething fromn each applicant?

If it was meant to be an ama-teur show and if it was meant toencourage art at MIT, it ac-complshed just the opposite. Itfru.ixated and disappointed somany paople and their friendswho had looked forward to seeingtheir work.

Lelt us hope that, in the future,such shows will be managed in amore demnz:A.atic manner!

Rose S. HurvitzDocument Room, RLE

Library recordcollection limited

lo the Editor:It has come to our a.tention

.aat the MlI Music Library isuevo. 'ci "semi-cla.sical' and"Fpoplarx music. Tnhs as truly a'iaa situatlon inasmuch as manyI eca students are unable to af-£1,rd these records, and WITBS isLhe only local station showing alesponse to phoned-in 'requests.Htence, a significant group at MITis forced to live in ignorance ofmcrn innovations in ,the musicalfeld.

We hope something can be done.o I eclaty this deplorable situa-tion.

Edmund Notzon '66George Hadley '65

I --- Incida IncrnmmIullucI !II&vIuu!II

Opportunities that go begging

--- by Jerry Luebbers, UAP----MIT is not a schoul of social

xnmpetents. The rader of tdi-tiont American Eteilature will, ofcourse, dikgree rather strongly,as will ridomn hanfi of girlsdating "ivy leagues." Althoughthose who have come dn directcontact with the MT sola scenegenerally leave impreLssed, thefadt remains that soc'_ life is notthe studen! axis at MLIT.

As it does play a dstiinly sec-ordary role, great care must beexercised to guarantee the placeoff social life. Living groups fillone "quiment and help to pre-serve saniily on a week-to-weekbasis.

Jutior Prom provides a socialhigfligt in the .trt term, amd 1heproposed spring weekend will dothe same ar the secmnd tmon. Ifeel it is the obligation iof student;leaders to maie availabIe to theMIT campus a diverse slectionof odial opportiies.

This does not include draggingreuctalt Don Juans from. theirstudies, nor, on the other hand,

i iKibSo r:^ z >A By Alai

No partnership can consistenlymake the best use of their cardson defense. Neverthless, a goodPlay can often get more from thecards than appear to be in them.

A player may attempt to gaintricks by deceiVing his opponentWith a Ibid or a play of the cards.(Deception by a mamer is dis-honest).

Leading the Jack from the topof a suit in dunmy toward thesingleton King in your hand isone of the oldest forms of de-ception. You want to convince theplayer on your rght that you arefinessing for the nmissing Ace andQueen and that he should nrdt playhis A<e so his partner will winwith the Queen.

A good defender will not indis-criminately lead amy from anAce fmce it may givean extra trick.

We.t4 A 873

North4 J9

6South4 6 52In the above situatior

the 3 of 4 may induceplay the Queen or 9 frnfluinking that West woultifrom an Ace. If Soutitwice under this decewill lose all the trickspade suitThe bidding:West North EastPass 1 PassPass 3 N.T. 4 'F

West -led the 10-.4.Three No-Trump is a

tract. Five heart ticspades, and the Ace ofbe taken off the top.

does it mean a paty aerethe party set.

The scial obligation inthe respobiility for supplyisocial calendar that appeaLthe greaetest possible numnbMIT studeints. It further ohthe spwsring groups to proattendance and ensure thecess p lSble only with aturnout.

Tis leads naturtally to ,heof deficit fieandg. If am inment of $2000 of ,imnce Bfunds suwcceeds in loweringticket cost at no sacrifice tcquality of the event and eman additional 200 couples tctend, then the money haswell spent. A sucesr weeis good public relations, but, sigifantly, it is a helthydition to the MIT campus.

'It is for tfihis Teason thatInstitube Cbommittee has advathe plans outinwd esewherthis issue, and I 1or one amtident it will be a boon toMIT commUny.

itzerRinsky

West49744 9 7 47 5 4 2

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North4 KQ2VA Q 1086+ Q J 4* A J*QJ44,AJ East

4 8 6 53J9

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But declarer does not seeEast and West hands and iscemed hat the Jack or NilHearts may take a trick if

declarer are guarded enough times.After inmIng the second

lead with Mis Ace, South

East duminy's Six of Hearts and4 Q 10 4 Without flinching, follows wit

Jack (!) and South wins WitKing. This. convinced dec

n, leading that West had the Nine alSouth to the Jack was a singleton,

n dummy, Nine was guarded enough Id not tead to take the fifth hearth finesses Theree, outh led a sptin, he heart and finessed dumy's

is an te iT lst to East's Nine.The opposition then took

dialm ds n 'two club trickSouth down two.

1 N.T. Had East played his ,Nn.ass stead of his Jack of Hearts

darer mniay have supectedcold con- for the Jock-Nime doubleton

;, three would have dropped the JackClubs can a second heaft lead and rm

suit.

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Letters to The Tech

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Hi-hFi and Stereo Equipmentat Lowest Prices!

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Ivith

(Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boysand Barefoot Boy With Cheek)

HAPPINESS CAN'T BUY MONEY

With tuition costs steadily on the rise, more and more under-graduates are looking into the student loan plan. If you areone such, you would do well to consider the case of LeonidSigafoos.

Leonid, the son of an unemployed bean gleaner in Straight-ened Circumstances, Montana, had his heart set on going'tocollege, but his father, alas, could not afford to send him.Leonid applied for a Regents Scholarship, but his readingspeed, alas, was not very rapid--three words an hour--andbefore he could finish the first page of his exam, the Regentshad closed their briefcases crossly and gone home. Leonid thenapplied for an athletic scholarship, but he had, alas, only a singleathletic skill-picking up beebees with his toes-and this, alas,aroused only fleeting enthusiasm among the coaches.

And then-happy day!-Leonid learned of the student loanplan: he could borrow money for his tuition and repay it ineasy installments after he left school!

Happily Leonid enrolled in the Southeastern Montana Col-

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,alaslonl�dsi�?ledthletl��k�lZlege of Lanolin ind Restoration Drama and happily began acollege career that grew happier year by year. Indeed, it be-came altogether ecstatic in his senior year because Leonid meta coed named Anna Livia Plurabelle with hair like beaten goldand eyes like two sockets full of Lake Louise. Love grippedthem in its big moist palm, and they were betrothed on St.Crispin's Day.

Happily they made plans to be married immediately aftercommencement-plans, alas, that were never to come to fruitionbecause Leonid, alas, learned that Anna Livia, like himself,was in college on a student loan, which meant that he not onlyhad to repay his own loan after graduation but also AnnaLivia's and the job, alas, that was waiting for Leonid at theButte Otter Works simply did not pay enough, alas, to coverboth loans, plus rent and food and clothing and televisionrepairs.

Heavy hearted, Leonid and Anna Livia sat down and litMarlboro Cigarettes and tried to find an answer to their prob-lem-and, sure enough, they did! I do not know whether ornot Marlboro Cigarettes helped them find an answer; all I knowis that Marlboros taste good and look good and filter good, andwhen the clouds gather and the world is black as the pit frompole to pole, it is a heap of comfort and satisfaction to be surethat Marlboros will always provide the same easy pleasure,the same unstinting tobacco flavor, in all times and climes andconditions. That's all I know.

Leonid and Amnna Livia, I say, did find an answer-a verysimple one. If their student loans did not come due until theyleft school, why then they just wouldn't leave school! So afterreceiving their bachelor's degrees, they re-enrolled and tookmaster's degrees. After that they took doctor's degrees-loadsand loads of them-until today Leonid and Anna Livia, bothaged 87, both still in. school, hold doctorates in Philosophy,Humane Letters, Jurisprudence, Veterinary Medicine, CivilEngineering, Optometry, Woodpulp, and Dewey Decimals.

Their student loans, at the end of the last fiscal year,amounted to a combined total of nineteen million dollars-asum which they probably would have found some difficulty inrepaying had not the Department of the Interior recently de-clared them a National Park. © 1963 Max Shulman

You don't need a student loan-just a little loose change-to grab a pack of smoking pleasure: MAarlboros, sold in allfifty states in familiar soft pack and Flip-Top box.

IFC Blood Driveplanned; to take placeWedneday, Nov. 20

The Inter- Fraternity Confer-ence will sponsor a blood driveNovember 20, 10:45 am to 4:45pm dn Kresge Auditorium.

As a public service project ofthe IFC, the blood will be do-nated ,to the New England Hemo-philia Association. The drive willbe conducted with the joint co-operation of the Cambridge Chap-ter of the American Red Cross,Massachusetts General HospitalBlood Bank, and the Children'sHospital Blood Bank.

According to Chip Hatfield, '64,chairman of the drive, this willbe the largest blood drive for thleHemophilia Association ever heldin Boston.

Fire scare at McCormick:e~~sr~S ..

Four fire engines and an ambulance answered a false alarmat McCormick Hall 11:55 Monday evening. According to theattendant, the alarm, sounding on the fourth floor of the dormi-tory, was due to faulty wiring.

Colodny first McCormick presidentSusan Colodny '65 is the first

president of McCormick Hall, thenew women's dormitory. Otherofficers are Janet Ramanovich'66, vice-president and treasurer;and Priscilla Marrs '65, secretary.

In addition the following floorchairmen were elected: SusanHenley '66, Elaine Ackles '67,Ruth Beckley '67, Myrna Simon

Pardonr me if I sound as if theexecutive position I've landeddeals with the whole future ofthe world.

'67, and Linda Mammon '67. Elec-tions took place October 15.

According to Sue Colodny, hermajor task as president will be tohelp girls in the dorm adjust :othe new dormitory and to the In-stitute.

Presently ninety girls reside atMcCormick Hall.

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It does.Certainly, there's no organization today conduct-ing more vital business than the business of theUnited States Air Force. And very few organiza-tions that give a college graduate greater oppor-tunities for responsibility and growth.

As an Air Force officer, you'll be a leader on theAerospace Team-with good pay, a 30-day paidvacation each year, educational opportunities.

How can you get started? For many, the best wayis through Air Force ROTC. But if you missed outon AFROTC, or if there's no unit on your campus,you can still apply for Air Force Officer TrainingSchool. This three-month course leads to a com-mission as a second lieutenant in the UnitedStates Air Force.

For more information about Air Force OTS, seeyour local Air Force representative.

U . . Air Force4mB

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Crossroads Africameeting October 30

A meeting of students interestedin the Crossroads Africa programwill be held in Litchfield Loungeof Walker Memorial at 3:30 pmWednesday, October 30.

Crossroads Africa is a workcamp project for American col-lege students who wish to spenda summer contributing to the de-velopment of 20 countries in Af-rica.

Last year a coed group of .310students representing many racesand religions served with Africancoworkers in clearing and con-struction work. For further infor-mation, con'tact Bill Samuels '65,at x3264.

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New foreign opportunities availableThe Foreign Opportunities Comrn- '65, at 266-3041 (x-3204), John

mittee intends to create a place Schwartz, '66, at 267-4572 (x-ment program for MIT students 3202) or Pat Winston at CI 7-to work in England and other 8691 (x-3206).European countries. The program The Foreign Opportunities Com-will be conducted through the mittee is a standing subcommit-International Association for the tee of Institute Committee. PatExchange of Students for Tech- Winston, '65, is chairman thisnical Experience, and independ- year.ently, through MIT.

The IAESTE, a group formn-ed in 1948, lists more than thirty They helpedcountries as partiipating memn- Tbers. It exchanges students forsummer work experience andtraineeships and is now attempt-ing to create study opportunitiesin Europe similar to junior yearabroad programs at other col-leges.

Interested students should im-mediately contact Bill Roeseler,

These six men were members of a team that developedan x-ray system so advanced that, even with exposure

to x-radiation reduced by 80%, images come out much

sharper on the diagnostician'sviewing screen. By bring-

ing to the task the unique talents, experience, and

educational background of each member, this team of

experts has macde it possible for radiologists and phy-

sicians to do a better job of medical diagnosis.

Of these six men from General Electric's X-Ray

Department, Milwaukee, four have degrees in engi-

neering, one majored in physics and math, and the

sixth in economics. Not one was trained primarily in

medical science-although, of course, their Depart-

ment works closely with the medical profession. Nor

did any of them anticipate, when in college, that their

major subjects would be put to use in providing

improved tools for diagnostic medicine. But they did

recognize-as their record shows-that better-than-

average performance could qualify them for challeng-

ing jobs with a forward-looking company like General

Electric.

There are hundreds of such teams at General Elec-

tric today. Their make-up varies, and almost every field

of specialization, technical and non-technical, is rep-

resented somewhere in the Company. The projects

are just as varied: nose cones for missiles, desaliniza-

tion of sea water,computersor power plants to squeezemore electricity from a pound of coal or a gramnt ofatomic fuel.

The more than 36,000 college graduates at GeneralElectric comprise one of the largest and most variedpools of talent in the nation. But the Company's futureis, in many ways, wrapped up in people still in schooland college. As projects increase in size and com-plexity, so will the need for able young people. Peoplewho demonstrate, through their college record, thebest use of their educational opportunities, who knowthe meaning of excellence, who understand the dif-ferences between specialization and narrowness,breadth and shallowness. Such people, working to--ether, will make up the teams of the future, and bethe architects of what we call progress.

The team (left to right): Jerry E. Rich, Georgetown Col-lege, Ky.,'53; Robert /. Mueller, Marquette,'44; WilliamA. Mayer, Univ. of Calif.,'47; John P. Kelley, R.P.1.,'47;William G. Waggoner, West Va. Univ., '33, Pratt Inst.,'37; Arthur Pruneau, Univ. of Vermont, '52.

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GENERAL ELECTRIC

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Tel. KI 7-8809pnOP Tuesday

M" PThr Sunday

8.01 theorem tested

Annual MeefingThe annual meeting of the membership ofthe Harvard Cooperative Society, in ac-cordance with Article XIV of the By-Laws,will be held in ...

Harvard Hall 1Wednesdlay, Oct. 23, 1963

5 p.m.Members who hav e joined since July 1, 1963are Participating Members and are cordiallyinvited to attend.

Baker House tools test basic law of Newtonian mechanicslearned in 8.01, that F=MA. -Photo by William Park

make a major advance in medical technology

$47,100 in grantsfrom Eastman Kodak

Eastman Kodak has granted$47,100 to MIT under their aid-to-education program for 1963. 'IMecontributions include an unre-stricted direct grant of $9,600 andthree Kodak research grants pre-viously announced and now inuse.

Earlier this year the companyawarded $12,500 grants for re-search to each of three MITgraduate departments - the De- 1partment of Chemistry, the De-partment of Physics, and the De-partment of Chemical Engineer-ing.

MIT is one of 53 privately sup-ported colleges and universities toreceive direct grants from Kodak this year. The amount of thesedirect grants is based on thenumber of graduates from theseinstitutions who joined Kodak five years ago and are presently em-ployed by the company.

.,.yet there's not an "M. D." in the house

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lt used to be that once a stu-det passed adr-non require-ments and paid his tuition andother feez he could regter forclasses. Some schoos are nowadding other reguatiorns. As apretequiite for registration at ftheUniversity of AlAbama, for ex-amnple, students must sign the fol-lowing aft:

"As a student at the Universityof Aalbama during the 1963-64Regular Session, I recognize thenessity for the oontinuation ofstringent regulations governingstudent conduct duming this per-'old of Potential crisi, and I here-by 4ree to abide by all suchregulations as the University ofAlabwma auorities may deemnecesary for the maintenance ofthe institution's academic integ-rity and to insure maximum per-sonal safety aid security of ailconcerned.

"In keeping wth the finest tra-ditios of the University and withthe full knowledge and under-stading of the necessity for thisaction, I pledge to refrain from'any onduct W'iAOh would in anyfashion acontrbute to disrder. Ishall at all times conduct my-self in such maner as to avoidall activities which wou'ld be inconflict with the high standardsexpcted of University students.

"I certify that I do not havein my possesion filreatrrns or oth-er .types of weapons, and furthercertify that I shal avoid havingsuch in my possession for theduration of these special secunitymeamures.

'DuPont T.M. for its polyester lfbet

otests over Alabama student oathid to modification for newspaper

"I will refrain from gratuitousor nogratuitous service with thenews media in matters expresslytouing on race rlations and thereporting of or .photbogmrphy ofNegro students or Negro appli-cants at the University. I under-stani, however, that this in noway prohibits me from serving inthe capacity of reporter or pho-tographer in fields other thanthose mentiorned above.

"Furthermore, I understandthat a breach of Itis pledge onmy part which is found to be inviolation of the high standardsset for university students maysubject me to severe disciplinarymeasures."

The oath, whidh was put intoeffect br the firgt time this year,drew considerable criticismn-par-ticularly with regard to the "re-porting or photography" para-graph. The editor of the Crimson-White, Alabanma't schoo1 news-paper, signed the oath under pro-test.

Student reaction, furthermore,was strong enough to bring abouta modifilation of the oath. Addedwas the phrase, 'No prohbitionson writing herein contained applyto the Crimson-White, the Uni-versity newspaper."

Oath at ColumbiaThe sigri of pledges is not a

custom being limited to southerncolleges. Freghmen at Columbiaare being requested to Sign anacademinc integrity statement asa first step toward the etablish-ment of 'an 'hoor code and theel:,ntion of proctors n exams.

The move is being sponsored bya group called the Commission onAcademic Integrity, whichn wasformed last year with the ap-proval of the dean's office.

An honor system for Oolumbiahas Ibeen under consideration forseveral years. The major obstadl6has always been that studentswere unwilling to sign a state-ment that required themr to re-port any infractions of the sys-tem.

The statement now being oir-culated has a provision thatmakes the student aware of itsbeing a violation of the code to"fraudently advance one's aca-denic status or knowIngly be aparty to another student's failureto maintain academic integrity."

New College (Literally)Just as new college regulations

ae frequely being established,new colleges are, themselves, ra-plifly being created. One of thelatest of these is literally TheNew CoUlege.

Located in Sarasta, Florida,The New College has just an-English historian Dr. ArnoldToynbee. The college which willope next fall with 100 studentswill be operated experimnently un-der an 11-month school year andwith a three-year degree pro-gram.

The announced goal of the col-lege is to give "pe al ed'uca-tio of a limited nunber o high-ily motivated and camable stu-dents." Teaching will 'be 'by sem-inar and tutorial system. Theschool, which will offer programsin the hunltties and sciences,will be coeducational.

And on the West CoaistNot to be outdone by l7orida,

new college are big opened in

California, too. Hable usted es-panol? If you do, then you maybe eligible to attend the firstSpanish-speaking college in theUnited States, Covell College inStxckton, Californira.

Covell, which opened min Sep-'tember, proposes to help LatinAmerican students overone thelanguage and cultural barriersthat often hinder a foreign stu-dent's work. Enrollment will belimited to 150 Latin Americasand 100 North Americans.

The school will emphasizermath- science, business admini-

dtration, and teacher 'training.The Drunheller Fountain

The University of WashingtonDaily asks: "The on- again - offagain Drunmheller fountain-whyis it what When it is?"

And answers: "It is on when itis because it's supposed to be on,every 'day from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.Occasionally, of course, it's offduring regular hours."

The Daily 'decided to tinvesti-gate why the fountain was some-htmes off during regular hoursand suggested that peihaps thewind was blowing. "When thewind is blowing, a clever little'mechanism automnatically shutsoff the water to protect the hap-less lower-campus dwellers whocarry only slide rules and books-never umbrellas."

But then the foutain wassometines off when the wind wasnot blowing. Why?

The Daily turned to one of thedeans for an answer. Replied thedean, "I thought it might havebeen for 'swimming."

After consulting a number 'fprofessors and secretaries, TheDaily finally found one professorwho was in charge Of the Hy-draulics Laboratory. The 'Hydrau-liecs Lab maintains Ithe pumps forthe fountain and uses the fountainwater for its experiments, he re-ported, but the lab doesn't haveto shut down the fountain to usethe water.

The pumps circultate the water,remsing water aiready in thefountain. The water pumped awayby the lab is replaced as it isused.

After some questioning, the De-partment of the Physical Plantstated that "somdbody downmthere" has permission to cut offthe fountain at will in order toconduct experiments.

'Who has perm'issi'on? NotChemistry. Certainly not Phar-macy. Possibly Cherical Engin-eering. But whoever it is, isn'ttalking.

Fin Board vacancy;seniors may apply

The Executive Committee of theInstitute Committee will inter-view seniors interested -in fillingthe vacancy on the FinancialBoard Sunday, October 27, at 6:30pm in Litchfield Lounge, 50-110.

Persons interested should con-tact Steve Miller, Financial BoardChairman before that time. Elec-tion will take place at the October31 Institute Committee meeting.

The vacancy was created whenLee Davis '64 resigned his posi-tion.

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The definitive Hootenanny of all time by America'smost exciting folk group. UAS 6294 (Stereo) UAL 3294 (Mono.) The Proudest Name In Entertainment

THE HIGWAYMEN RACQUETS RESTRUNGSATURDAY, OCT. 26 Prompt ServiceKresge 8:30 P.M. Tenis & Squash Shop

Tickets in Building 10 67A Mt. Auburn St., Combridee(Opp. Lowell House)

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Dramashop gives lonesco and Carlino one-actsBy R. L. Bringhurst

Dramashop's Friday "Eveningof OneAotis" presented two plays,the first an Ionesco of more thanusual interest. The second play,authored 'by Lewis John Carli,proved a juvenile vehicle for a

tlucity i rti ideas.The presentation cd Ionesm's

'Victims of Duty' was the Tesultof some caareul and tasbtef cut-dIg done -by dirctor Steve Schu-rrman. Mr. Schumn an seems bo havebeen unusually oidept at providingfor hs cast's Urnliitations.

- '""-- A. GREENHIUL IPRSENTS

Friday, October 25, 8:30 P.M.DONNELLY

MEMORIAL THEATRETickets: $4.00, 3.25, 2.80, 2.20

HU 2-1827 -_

The play is aracterized bythe Ionesido bhbit of 'bringing sup-posed foaets of- modern life tothe level of the ridiculusly un-wbtle. Here, as uruay, tlis isaconised through a skethyenormity of encoept and of ob-vious inferece. As a resullt, al-most every line of the play offersa humorous, if often literarilybogus, aiorisan on the contem-psranemus. The very unsubtle,driving repetition for which Ion-esco is famobu was largely dis-posed of in churman's condensa-

The action of the play seemedspIattered with particlate refer-

U N* UN4-480usuu

"CarrEy On Regeardless" o 3:,4, 6:30. 9:45 o{ : "Get On With It" cc 1:45, 5:00, 8:05C U

Sun.-Mon.-Tues. L"The Haunting"

"c 1:20, 5:25, 9:35 a"The 4 Days of Naples"

*; 3:20, 7:30

: . * TR R6-42a umuu

ci The Comedie Francaise in_~ ' Beaumarchais' o

"The Marriage of Figaro"j3 * (The play, not the opera)

_o Starting Sunday Z"Candide" g

(New French Film) * Shows daily 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 cc Matinees Sat. & Sun. at 3:30 a

J untumu -uuum um annumnsn in-

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The Dramashop company holds a bull session with the audienceafter the one-acts last Friday. In the background is the set fromlonesco's 'Victims of Duty.' -Photo by William Park

ences ,to tpics of elementary ish sipt, at least into, in MT.psYdhcgi'cal dslussion. It seems Morlan's words, "a theater ex-to me that this splattering ould peiience." No directig talent,have been done in 'a fashion lessinjurvious to the play's coherency.

The play deals principally withIonesco'S own seoach for some-thig new in the theater. Althoughthis interesting approah adds tothe interest of 'Victims of Duty,'it is also, I think, a contributingfactor to Ionesco's over-use ofjuveiile props which accompnlishnearly nothing. One example ofsuch an aiditive i the mysteri-ous wnd silent 'Lady.' (Those in-terested in Ionesco's opinions re-garding the role and lationalityof imagination in the moderntheater are rderred to the TulaneDrana Review, Winter 1960 edi-tion).

As for 'Objective Case,' corsid-erable credit is due (Mr. JbsephMorllan for tranraing C(arihno'soccasional interesting ideas fromtheir dormancy in a high-school-

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however, could have renderedJohn Carlino's ribaldry even tothe level of the Freudian pseudo-satire present in Iriesco's 'Vic-tfmas of Duty.'

Let it be noted that during apostperformance critical discus-sion, both cast and directors de-fended themnselves admirably be-fore a ther c sarevessly opinion-ated audience.

Last and incidentally, a littleforethought (and perhaps the sell-ing of tickets) could have easilyelimuinated the upright thirty-'min-ute wait foisted upon the audienceas a pretcet to the plays them-selves. The idle time was notacttally so offLirve as the ittlegrey man vio 'ried uponshuffling back anrd forth 'betweencrowd mad emtpt ty e.ter, re-peatedly lockiing the dor behind'hmfa,

Movie Schedul

November 5, 1963

leWednesday, Ootober 23 through Tues

.day, October 29 (Unless otherwise stat.ed the SLvndar schedu/e is the sameas the weekday schedule except thatno movies are shown before 1:00 A.M.ASTOR-'Ior the French Style.' 9:40

111:40, 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40. 9:40!Sunday, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10. 9:10.

BEACON HILL - 'Fantasia ' 9:00l1:10, 1:20, 3:30, 5:40, 7:50, 10:00.

B0STON CINERA.MA - 'How theWest Was Won,' F:30 matinees Wed.nseday, Saturday 2:00, Sunday 1:00,4:45.

BRATTIF, - The Comedie Francaisein Beurnarhais' (The Marriage ofFigaro (the pay, not the opera,.Starting Sunday: ('Candide') (nevFrench film). Shows daily 5:30, 7:309:30; matinees Sat. and Sun. at 3:30.

OAPRI - "The Lilies of the Field"';10:30, 12:00, 2:00, 4.00. 6:00, ,.ooo10:00, Sunday, 1:25, 3:20, 5:20. 7:20,9:20.

CINEMA - 'Lord of the Flies,' 2:20,4:15, 6:07. 8:00, 10:00.

COO1IADGE C(ORNER - '3 Fables ofLove,' 2:35, 9:20, Sat. & Sun., 3:30,6:20, 9:20; 'Maid for Murder.' 1:00,7:45, Sat. & amn., 2:00, 4:45, 7:45.

EXETER - 'Murder at the Gallop,'2:20, 4:10, 6:00, 7:45, 9:35. StartingSaturday: 'Hfeavens Above!' 2:15,4:30, 6:45, 9:00.

GARY - 'The Leopard,' 10:00. 12:45.3:30, 6:15. 9:00; Sun., 1:00, 3:45,6:30, 9:15.

HARVARD SQUARE - ('Carry OnRegardless.') 3:25. 6:30. 9:45: ('GetOn With It,) 1:45, 5:00, 8:05. Sun-jday-Mondary Tuesday: ('The Haunt-ing,') 1:20, 5:25, 9:35; I'The FourDays of Naples') 3:20. 7:30.

KEITH MEMORIAL - 'The RunningMan,' 11:10, 2:40, 6:05. 9:35. Sun..2:35, 5:55, 9:15; 'The Gun Hawk.,'9:35, 1:00, 4:30. 7:55, Sun.. 1:00.4:15, 7:35.

LOE:¥W'S ORPHEt'M - 'The V.I.P.s.'10:15, 12:20, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:35;Sunday, 1:00, 3:00. 5:05, 7:20, 9:40.

1L'C - 'The Virgin Spring.' Oct. 25.Room 10-250, 6:30. 9:00; 'Carousel.'Oct. 26, Room 10-250, 5:15. 7:30.9:45; 'Fragment of an Emnpire.' Oct.27, Room 10-250, 6:30. 9:00.

MAVFIOWE1 -- 'L-Shaped Room.'11:00, 2:20, 5:40. 9:00, Sun., 2:20.5:45,. 9:00; 'Beauty and the Body,'10:00, 1:15, 4:35. s:00), un., 1:20,4:40. S:00.

MUSI(' HALI-'Cleoipatra,' 2:00, S:00.

PARAMOUNT - 'The New Kind ofLove,' 1:35, 4:05. 6:35, 9:05.

PARK SQ. CINEM]A - ',.', 2:15,4:30, 7:00, 9:30.

PIIGRI.M - through Oct. 2s, 'TwiceTold Tales,' 10:55., 2:10, 5:30, S:55,Sun., 2:20, 5:40, 9:05; 'Girl in BlackStockirngs,' 9:35. 10:55, 4:15. 7:40,Sun., 1:05, 4:25. 7:45.

SAXON - 'Irma La Douce,' 11:30,2:00, 4:30, 7:00. 9:30.

UPTOWNS - 'L-Shaped Room.' 1:00,5:10, 9:20; 'The Caretakers,' 11:15,3:25, 7:35, Sun.. 3:20, 7:35.

WELLEkSLEY CO).MMUINITY PLAY-HOtISE - 'Mutiny on the Bounty,'7:45, matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:00.Starting Sunday: 'The Great Escape,'7:45, Sun. continuous beginning at4:45.

Theatre ScheduleCHARLES PItAHOUSE--" The Hos-tage. " S:30

HOTEL BOSTONIAN PLAYHOI'SF -'The Bald Soprano.' and 'The DockBrief,' Wed. 7:30. Fri. & Sat. 7:00,9:30, Tues.-Thurs. & Sun. 8:30.

LU1AGE - 'Aatigone,' Sat. 7:00, 9:00,Wed,-Fri. s :30.

SHtI'BE T - 'Black l Nativity.' q:30.Fri. 7:00, 9:30. matinee Sat. 2:30.Starting Monday: 'One Flew over theCuckoo's Nest,' opening night .S:00.other evenings 8:30.

VICTMTIS OF DUTY by EugeneIonesco; Directed ;by Steve Schru-man; with Michael Jacobs, WilmaSandler, Leonard Lynch, andDavid Liroff. Also, OBJECTIVECASE by Lewis John Carlino;Directe .by Joseph Morlan; withJohn Sowle and Pamela ,King.Both plays the products of MITDramashop; Friday, Oct. 18 inKresge Little Theater.

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Sunday Evening OCTOBER 27 at 8 o'clock

DWIGHT MACDONALDea ,'+8 (Staff Writer on "NEW YORKER")

"Mass Culture: Threat or Promise to America?"

FORRD HALL FORrUMJORDAN HALL -- Gainsboro St. tor. Huntington Ave. - BOSTO11DOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOMI

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Critic 's Choice .Visconti's cut 'Leopard'

nevertheless seeableBy Gilberto Perez-Gullermo

LuchinO Visconti, like Bressonand Mizoguchi, is one of those di-rectors of international reputationwhose work is little known in thiscountry. 'Ossessione' (1942) ini-tiated neorealism, and 'La TerraTrema' (1948) is regarded bymany as the greatest work in thatmovement, but these films havenever been shown in the U.S., andprobably never will be (the Mu-seum of Modem Art had an-nounced a showing of 'La TerraTrema' during the New York FilmFestival, but it didn't take place).What has been shown is a muti-lated 'Rocco and his Brothers,' asection of 'BoEaccio '70,' 'Bellis-sima (which I missed), and thatfascinating film, 'White Nights.'Now, we have 'The Leopard' (atthe Gary theatre), a Grand Prixwinner at Cannes, a film widelypraised, where, presumably, Vis-conti expresses the views on his-tory which caused the censorshipof 'Senso' by the Italian govern-ment.

The film, however, is shown ina mutilated, badly dubbed ver-sion, which the distributors areattempting to sell as a spectacu-lar, which of course it is not.There is no action and very littleplot, the interest being focussedon the development of feelings, ofattitudes, in a changing world.The distributors claim to have re-moved scenes which would be in-comprehensible to, viewers notversed in Italian history. Not hav-ing seen the film in its entirety,I can only quote Ian Cameron'scomments in the British maga-zine 'The Spectator': ". . thescenes which are not 'essential tothe plot' are crucial to the mean-ing.. . it will be every critic'sduty to tell his public that themasterpiece, which they would bepaying to see, has been degradedto a series of pretty but meaning-less scenes."

As I saw it, 'The Leopard' is afilm magnificent in its visualbeauty, in its use of decor to ex-press the spirit of an age ofchange.

The final ball sequence is asclose to a masterpiece as any-thing I have seen from Visconti,triumphantly expressing the stateof mind of the proud Prince ofSalina (Burt Lancaster, in the per-formance of his life), and thenature of the world around him.The first half of the film, how-ever, lacks the unity of develop-ment it should have had, and thecharacter of the prince comesthrough only in the second half.Whether the faults in the sketchyfirst part, which makes it tediousand irritating at times, were inthe original version or not, I can-not tell, but Visconti is to blamein any case for the overacting ofsome of the characters.

Ingmar Bergm an, a lesser di-rector than Visconti, has, on theother hand, had most of his works,good and bad, shown in this coum-try. In his best works ('WildStrawberries,' 'Smiles of a Sum-mer Night,' 'The Naked Night,'Bergman displayed an interestingvisual style, an outstanding abil-ity for the direction of actors, anda keen dramatic intuition, all themore notable since it was often

Kresge Organ Seriesto begin this eveningwith British organist

I

put to express philosophical wor-ries.

In 'The Virgin Spring' (at LSCContemporary Series), he handlesa theme one would have thoughtcompelling in a strangely cold fa-shion. One gathers he is trying toexpress his theological worries,but this film, unlike 'The SeventhSeal, is not very impressive. 'TheVirgin Spring' is technically pol-ished to a higher degree than anyof his previous films, and the se-quence of the father's revenge isalmost as effective as the best ofhis previous work. Unfortunately,one has the nagging suspicion thatit was intended to work at a high-er, more 'intellectual' level than itdoes.

FILMS TO AVOID: 'The Laven-der Hill Mob,' 'Toys in the Attic,''The Wrong Arm of the Law,''Strangers When We Meet,' 'TheThrill of it All,' 'The Balcony,'Battte of the Sexes,' 'The Lion,''Nine Hours to Rama.'

FILMS TO SEE: 'This SportingLife,' 'Rock-a-Bye, Baby,' 'WestSide Story,' 'The Virgin Spring,''Splendor in the Grass,' 'Lawrenceof Arabia.'

FILMS NOT TO MISS: 'TheLeopard.'

Geraint Jones, Britysh mganistand coxrActor, witl give the open-ing cabwet in the 196364 OrganSere tnight in Kreasge Auditor-imn at 8:30.

1 prgia~m wii be:Prelude and Fugue in F-sharpminor DtDiri Bde uxtdeTwo Noels Lou/sI-aude JaquinPredlud and Figue in B minor

J. S. BachVaifations on La Forla

Berarndo PasqtniAllegro Jao de Sousa cav(alhoVeaiiaios on La Fola

Girodamo FrescbaldiSorata for a trumpet stop

Jose LedonAdagio and Aflegro in F m yror

MozartVlaoatior on a theme of Badi

'Welnen, Elagen, Sorgen,Zagen, Liszt

'Ickes are $1.50 at the KresgeBox Offioe. Sedit' tiiets are stillarvlaalbe at $4.00.

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Contemporary Series

"The Virgin Spring"Friday EveningOctober 256:30, 9:00 P.M.Room 10-25060c

LECTURE SERIES COMMITTEEEntertainment Series

"Carousel"Saturday EveningOctober 265: 15, 7:30 9:45 P.M.Serial at 5:00, Room 10-25035c

Classic Series"Fragment of An Empire"

Sunday EveningOctober 276:30, 9:00 P.M.Room 10-250Admission by membershipticket only

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By Alan RickettsBaton Society

The Combined Musical ClubsConcert, presented at KresgeAuditorium lasit Saturday eve-nin, was an outaniog duction to student music at MIT.Opening the program was Gor-don Jacob's Music for a Festival,a work which combined the Con-cert conducted by John Corleyand the Brass Choir conducted

sages. On November 2, the en-tire symphony will be presentedat Kresge. It should be worth at-tendS.g

The Glee Club opened the vocalpoftion of the program with alusty rendition of Grieg's "ChoralSalutation," Brothers Sing On'The Glee Club displayed a finechoral sound in its capella pre-sentation of the work. In the suc-ceedhg works, the group wasoften masked by the orchestraand the Kresge organ.

Aside from a noticeable scar-city of tenors, the Glee Club'sperformances of the excerpt fromBach's Wedding Cantata and ofFranck's 150 Psalm were donewith sensitivity and consistentmusicianship,

Joined by the orchestra andthe Wheelock College Glee Club,the Glee Club closed the eveningwith a performance of Handel'sfrom The Messiah. A xzfifli

immoral chorus, Hallelujah!from The Messiah A hesitattionby the women to appear on stageprompted Professor Liepmann tobegin without them. After a 10-bar "duet'"' by the Glee Club andorchestra, he stopped the perfor-mance and the ladies were finallypersuaded to enter.

The work was done with pre-cision and with little of the bom-bastic orchestration and dynam-ics added to the work in recentyears. The orchestra ard baoth

glee clubs are to be commendedfor their b y creditableperf a in this concludingsection of te proam.

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If you cannot attend the interview, write:Manager of College Relations, I IBM Co590 Madison Ave., New York 22, N. Y. I

Combined Musical Clubs: BrassChoir, Willis E. Trapha gan con-ducting; Concert Band, John Oor-ley conducting; the Teohtonlans,Herb Pomeroy directing; Sym-phony Orchestra. John Corlaey con-ductlng; Glee Club, Klaus Liep-mawnn conducting; Wheelock lol-lege Glee Clulb.

PROGRAMBrass ChoAir

and Concert BandMusic far a Festival

Gordon JacobThe Teehtonlans

Blues Around the BlockBob Freedman

A Song for SomeoneDick Wright

Take the 'A' TrainArif .lardin, Arr,

Anrd We Listened to HimnBob Freedmnan

Symphony OrchestraSymphony No. 1 in E Minor

Aramn KhathaturianGlee Club

Brothers, Sing On!Edvard Grieg

Der Herr Segne EuchJ. S. IBac

Glee Cluband Snlphony Orehestru

the 150th Psalm Cesar FranckWheelock College Glee Club

M I T Glee Cluband Synghony Orchestra

Hallelulah! frmn 'The Messiah',Handel

NOV. 14 d

~~~aweTHEGENERALDYNAMICSASTRONAUTIISTORYBEFORE YOUDECIDE ONA CAREERASSOCIATION

by Willis Traphagan. The Bandturned out a superb performance.This reviewer has only praise forthe group and for ir. Corley.

All sections consistently play-ed on pitch with smooth transit-ions and few eposed passages.Seldom was there a time whenone could criticize the quality ofmusicianship evident in theirinterpretation and playing abilty.

The Bass Choir, under its newdirector, had a freshness of pre-sentation and spirit previouslyunheard at Kresge. Toward theconclusion of the work, however,their inter-action did slip, escially in'the upper brass, as theyapparently began to rtire.

The Techtonians, the MIT oon-cert jazz band, playing four uptemo swing arrangements byseveral well-known composers,complete the first half of the pro-gram. The two soloisd featuredin this part of the program wereobviously good musicians butlacked the projection necessaryto hold their parts of the sev-eral numbers together. Over allthe sax s e c t i o n was in tunewhile the brass had some inton-ation and clarity problems.

The Symphony Orchestra play-ed the first movemert frownKhatchatourian's Symphony No.1. The life and expression whichthe orchestra brought fofh in itsperformance of the work wereoutstanding. Intonation was nevera problem in any section. Therewere a few instances in whicha hesitancy in entrances wasnoticeable, but inl most casesthis problem did not affect thegenerally smooth transition pas-

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Orchestra to give Armenian musicA coert of Armerian music

will be prested by the KmitasChOra diety of Bosn ad theSymphony Ordhestrm at KresgeAoditoriumn Novemrribr 2 at 8:30.

The program Wl be spomoredby the Armeran Chib, which Was

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reorgarid last year. The Komi-das Choral Society ds an Axmen-tn group of severity merberthat was organid ten years ago.

Roulben Gregorian, P e r s i a nborn violirst and facuty memberof tie Boston C seatory ofMusic '.l conduct with JohnCorley, Aisgistant Director of Mus-sic.

The pogram includes Khacha-tourian's Symphony No. 1 in Eminor, a work inffuenced by Ar-menian musical khioms. 'HayrMer,' originally a pagan Arnmeti-an chant performed during an-dient fire-rites 'and adapted about301 A.D. ito suit the ChristianLord' Prayer.

Other pieces will be:Mosy's An'a from opera 'Anoush'

Cantata fcMy SongBraves ofAy Vart

Nocturne

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:m Making the Scene ETHIS WEEK

MUSIcKresge Organ meries - Geriant Jones.Kresge Audii'orium, Oct. 23, 8:30; $160Instrurneatal and Vocal Music - New

England Conservatory, Jordan Hall,Oct. 23, 8:30; Beethoven's Sonatain A nmajor, Brahms' Sonata in Gmajor, for piano and violin

The Highwaymnen - Kresge AudlitboriumOct. 26, s:30; $2.00, $2.50

Gardner Museum - American ArtsTrio, Oct. 27, 3:00; Beethoven'sTrio in E flat major, Donovan'sTrio, Bamhrns' Treo in C major

Hayden Music Library - Oct. 28, 5:00:Sonata for Cello and Piano, Songs,Piano Pieces; free

THEAqTRETufts Arena Theatre - 'The Barber

of Seville.' Beaumarchais, Oct. 24-26,8:30; S1.75

Boston University Theatre - 'TheThree Sisters'. Anton Chekov, Oct.24-26, 8:30; $2.00, $1.50, $1.00

Loeb Dranma Center - 'The InspectorGeneral,' Nicolai Gogol, Oct. 24-Nov.2, 8:30, $1.50, $2.00

'Soorat and Seerat' - Indian movie,English subtitles, Oct. 25 KresgeAuditoriurn, S:00; $.99

ISC Contemporary Series - "'he Virg-in Spring,' 10-250, Oct. 25, 6:30,9:00; 60c. This film by Swedem's Ing-

mar Bergman is onsidered to be oneof his most important works. It recent-ly won an Acaderrmy Award, and is ac-cording to Time, "A violently beauti-ful miracle play.Hong Kong OPera Troupe - Hu

Tropue, Dancer-singer-actors fromHong Kong, Alumnae Hall, We'lesleyOorlege, Oct. 25, 8:00

1S(' Entertainment Series- Carsel'10-250, Oct. 26, 5:15, 7:30. 9:45;35 c. Although a swaggering carmval

barker mistreats the shy cotton millgirl he marries, he loves her in hisway, and dies trying to provide propercare for their corming baby by hi-jacking a payroll. A brilliant filmingof the musical success by RichardRodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.(CinemaScope and Color)LSCC (Classic Series - 'Fragment of

an Empire', 10-250, 6:30, 9:00.Through the parable of a man wholoses his memory in Wrvld War I and

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regains it ten years later in the newworld of Soviet Russia, this film drarn-atizes the social proIblems and con-flicts arising from the imposition ofthe new order on the ocd Czarist cul-tare. (UR, 1929) Also, Land With-out Bread

LECT[URJISir Neville Ashenbelim - Amibassa4or

of Jamaica to the U.S. InoernationalSudent Assciation, Oct. 24, 8:00

Harvard Law school Forum - 'eFu'ure Of the House Un-AmericanActivities Committee', RepresentativeWillis of Louisiana, Oct. 25.

Canterbury Lectures - 'Barth TheHumanity of God', Trinity Chuxrceh,Oct. 27, 8:00.

Ford Hall Forum - Dwight MacDon-ald, Jordan Hail, Oct. 27, 8:00; MassCulture: Threat or Promise to Am-erica'.

C. Northeaote Parkinson - Oct. 28.Kresge Auditorium, 8:00.

MISCELLANEOUSArt Preview - Oct. 25, 8:00-41:00;

Oct. 26, 11:00-8:00; Armenian Apos-tolic Holy Trinity Cburch, $1.00.

Boston Arts Festival - Rebradcast.a hoot with Jackie WashingtonWTBS. Oct. 26, 7:00.

Poetry from M.I.T. - X. 3. Kennedy,WGBH-FM. 89.7 mc Oct. 27, 7:00.

'The Spoken Word' - stories of FranzKafka read by Lotte Lenya, W'IBS,·8::00, Oct. 27.

'Switzeriand TodaY' - with talk byJohn Roberts, Oct. 27, Rindge Audi-torium, Cambridge, 4:00; free.

Etchings of van 31osea - CommnunityChurch Art Center, through Nov. R,9-5.

'Great Costumes 1550 - 1950--Museumof Fine Arts. through Dec. 1, Tues-day 10-10, Wednesday-Saturday 10-5,1:30-5:30.

NEXT WEEKMIISIC

Chapel Orman Series MIT students.Nov. 3, 4:00; free.'The Worlds of Benny Goodman' -

Nov. 2, Donnelly Memnorial; worksof Brahms and Mozaxrt, jazz.

-Jakov Fliere - Russian pianist, Jor-dan Hall, Nov. 4.

THEATRE1SC Festival of the Performlng Arts-

George London with the FestivalConcert Orchestra, Room 10-250,7:00, Oct. 30.

New Eangland Conservatory Opera -'L'Erfant Prodigue' by Claule De-bussy and 'The Old Maid and theThief' by Gian-Cario Menotti, Oct.31, Nov. 1, 8:30 the Conservatory'sBrown Hall; $1.00.

MISCEIANEOUSNathaniel Braiden - 'Objectivism:

The Philosophy of Ayn Rand,' Nov.1, Hotel Madison, 7:30; $ 3.50.

'Poetry frnom MIff' - WC-BH-FM 89.7mc, Nov. 3, 7:09,. Richard Wilbur.

Boston Arts Festival Rebroailcast -

Theodore Bikel, Nov. 2, 7:00, WTBS.'The Spoken WVord' - T. S. Eliot read-

ing his own poetry, 'WTBS, Nov. 3,Y,.:00.

Folklore Concerfsto begin Friday

The Foildore Concert Series for1963-64 will include ten programs.

Mahalia Jackson will open theseries this Friday at the DonnellyMemorial Theater. Bob Dylan willfollow on November 2, and theClancy Brothers and Tommy Ma-kem at Symphony Hall November

S26

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I N am Science leclure7:30 P.M., Friday, October 25

Hayden Library Lounge, 14 E 3 ICChristian Science Organization

at M.l.T.

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Facilities of other libraries provide information for TechBy June Paradise

Sometime in the experience ofeach Tech student, he will un-doubtedly encounter a subjectwhich is not covered by our li-braries. This fact is quite under-standable in the light of the var-

iety of interests of the diverseMIT student body. The followingarticle is offered as a guide tostudents who wish to avail them-selves of the facilities of otherlibraries, which are situated veryclose to MIT.

The Harvard Library, whichhas a collection of six millionvolumes and many other sources,is the largest library in 4the area.In fact, Harvard Library is theI a r g e s t great privately sup-ported library in the world.

There are eighty physically

$ $$s $ $ $ ss$ $ 4$ CALIFORNIA $

,ROUND TRIP AIR FARE savingsup to $125 - Meas

0 Why pay more?*, RALPH GORDON.Student Rep., CO 6-0122

Others: Chicago, Florida. etc. '$ $$ $ $ $ $ s S $ $

separate libraries within the Har-vard Library. The main collec-tion of books is housed in theHarry Elkins Widner MemorialBuilding. Procurement from oneof the various libraries in theHarvard Library could be a prob-lem. The only people who areofficially able to take out booksfrom the Harvard Libraries areHarvard and Radcliffe studentsand professors, as well as visitingscientists. However, this factshould not discourage the ingenu-itive MIT student. One could al-ways borrow a card from afriend from Harvard or Radcliffe.

Also within a few miles ofMIT, located in Copley Square,is the Boston Public LiAbrary,(,BPL). The BPL has about2,200,000 books in its collection,as well as other resources. Ifone lives in Boston, there is nocharge for a card. However, for anon-resident of Boston, there isa charge of five dollars per yearfor a card.

Within the city limits of Cam-bridge, there is the CambridgeLibrary. This library's collectionconsists of about 24,000 books.books. Anyone residing in Cam-bridge can obtain a card therewithout paying a fee. "Howeverthere is a charge if one is nota resident of Cambridge.

Draper first speakerat Technology Forum

The first in a series of facultytalks entitled "The TechnologyForum" will be held in the Kres-ge Little Theater from Monday,October 28, from 4:00 to 5:00 pm.Dr. Charles S. Draper, head ofthe Department of Aeronauticsand Astronautics will speak.

According to Leonard Levin,publicity chairman, the purposeof the Technology Forum is "topresent the leaders in variousfields of science and engineeringand to make clear to the audiencethe fascinating developments tak-ing place at the very frontiers ofthese fields."

Dr. Draper is world-famous forhis work on inertial guidance sys-tems for aircraft, ships, and mis-siles. He is the director of theInstrumentation Laboratory whichdid the initial development workon guidance systems for the Po-laris missile and the Apollomoonship.

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Sunday 9 P.M.88.1 Mc. 640 Ke.

DICK BARRYMORE PRESENTS

HIS 1963 SKI MOVIE

WHITE SEARCHin vivid color

Wednesday, October 23, 8:30 P.M., John Hancock HallTickets $1.75 at door or at T.C.A.

Auspices of White Mountain Ski Runners

CAMPUS INTERVIEWSNovember 4, 1963

ENGINEERINGSCIENCES

ALL DEGREE LEVELS

* Electronics

* Mechanical* Industrial* Engineering Physics0 Mathematics* Statistics

RESEACH and DEVELOPMENT'0 Computer Technology

- Hardware Design

- Software Research -

0 Communications Systems

- Propagation Research

- Complex Design

Engineers, Mathematicians, and Physicisfs should contact

their COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICER for an appoint-

ment with an NSA representative. No test required.

SECURITY

WASHINGTON, D. C. area

An Equal Opportunity Employer

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ominations forellowships dueNominations of MIT seniors forboodrow Wilson Fellowships must

esvblitted to Dean Wilmairby.Miller of Radcliffe College,e Regional Chairman, by Oc-

)ber 31. Faculty members arerged to submit recommendationsProfessor B. Alden Tresher, Di-

,ctor of Admissions Emeritus,lT's regional representative.rof. Thresher will forward reo-ainendations to Dean Kirby -iller.According to Professor Thresh-r, nine MIT seniors have beenaned Fellows for each of the,

st three years. About thirty orrty nominations are enteredo0n MIT annually.Fellows are selected with re-rd to their interest in, and po-

ntial for, college teaching; theyre not further obligated to the!ellowship Foundation.The Foundation originated on anall scale, awarding about aalf-dozen fellowships per year.

change costs $583,000Cyclotron_ XIIIIEW 1Xuwl"'W

Earle White, chief operator of MIT's cyclotron, inspects theimprovements made as the result of a $583,000 modernizationprogram. White has been with the cyclotron since its birth in theearly 1940's.

(Conlizlnued from Page 1) and Mary Markle Foundation. Ateam headed by Professor Evans

particles are measured by clock- and Professor M. Stanley Living-

]~~~~~~~~~~............

,...ing their speed.The finer focusing now available

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THE TECH COOP HAS SHULTON

will permit researchers to obtainmore detailed and specific re-sults from the experiments. Thenew beam control will achievethis finer focusing by narrowingdown the range of particle ener-gies that are distributed over across section of the beam.

The cyclotron was originallybuilt under a grant from the John

ston designed the facility.The Laboratory of Nuclear Sci-

ence, directed by Professor PeterT. Demos, has other high-energyresearch facilities, including a 20-Mev electron linear acceleratorand a 10-Mev Van de Graaff pos-itive ion accelerator.

PMD brotherswill be honored

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Young scientists and engineers "going places" investi-gate a variety of challenging engineering avenuesbefore selecting one best suited to their goals. Andthey look for a professional climate with lots of indi-vidual recognition and advancement opportunity. Ifyou are charting your career along this course, letLing-Temco-vought be your guide.As one of the nation's most versatile contributors tothe aerospace, military electronics and communica-tions sciences, LTV can offer you a personalized routeto an exciting and rewarding future in such areas asaerodynamics * avionics and instrumentation ·Operations apalysis * dynamics e systems design ·

servomechanisms * stress analysis * propulsion ·communications design * reliability/maintainabilityengineering · reconnaissance systems * amplifier andcomputer systems * microwave components design ·electromagnetic interference control * electronic sys-tems analysis * telemetry and tracking * trajectoryanalysis * manufacturing r&d · industrial engineering* technical administration . . . plus many others.For a closer look at the numerous career directionsavailable with Ling-Temco-Vought, ask your PlacementOffice for our brochure describing LTV projects andproducts. Or write College Relations Office, Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., P. O. Box 5907, Dallas 22, Texas.Ling-Temco-Vought is an equal opportunity employer.

L V AN G - TEM CO - V O U G , .

4r-T9QO DIVISIONS AND SUBSIDIARIES: CHANCE VOUGHT CORP. / CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS & MANUFACTURING COMPANY / LING ALTEC / LING ELECTRONICSLTV MICHIGAN / LTV RESEARCH CENTER / ALTEC LANSING / TEMCO ELECTRONICS & MISSILES COMPAM'Y / ED FRIEDRICH INCORPORATED / UNIVERSITY LOUDSPEAKERS

Members of Phi Mu Delta fra-ternity who helped evacuate aneighboring apartment house dur-ing a fire last spring will be hon-ored this Saturday with a party.

According to Mrs. E. Ciolina,owner of the apartment house,she is giving the party as an ex-pression of her gratitude for theassistance she received from thefraternity.

"I appreciate their spontaneouswillingness to help me. It was asign of true friendship," said Mrs.Ciolina.

On April 5, 1963 Mrs. Ciolina'sapartment house, located at 462Beacon Street, caught fire at 5:00am. An alarm sounded at thePMD house at '460 Beacon Streetat 5:30 am. The members of thehouse helped evacuate the apart--ment house and brought the resi-dents, mostly elderly women, totheir house.

In the process of putting out thefire, the building was extensivelydamaged. According to the firecommissioners, 804' of the prop-erty was damaged.

Members of PMD helped Mrs.Ciolina clean the apartment houseafterwards and make it suitablefor work by contractors.

An electrical fire in the walls at462 Beacon Street was cited asthe cause of the fire.

Young Republicanswill meet Tuesday

The first meeting this term ofthe MIT Young Republicans willbe Tuesday, October 29 at 4:15pm in Rm. 5-133. Professor JohnS. Saloma, representing the Coun-cil for Constitutional Reform inMassachusetts, is guest speaker.

The other major items of busi-ness will be reconsideration ofthe club's constitution and dis-cussion of activities for the year.

For further information, stu-dents may contact Charles Dan-ey or Jim Puls at x3207 or 247-8602.

you areLuCKY I

Low-cost mkbslP Su Ufe Insur-ance is avalable ONLY t people -wholive or work in lah usetts. It'syour privilege to apply for It for anymember of your family from 15 daysto age 70 - In amounts from up. Wide choice of polcle stFraightlife, endowment, limited pay, mort-gage cancellation, D-5* (Special Divi-dend Option 5) and our famous termprotection, all low, low cost. Ask forfree folder giving rates and benefits.

CambridgeportSavings Bank

Right in Cmehrua Sq., CambridgeTelepbo UN 4-s271

WHERE ARE YOU GOING THIS VOCATION?

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Mixers fade away, but never die

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Bexley Hat, llafluwen ance, in4t1e Baker House XEtalliM f;8-12 pm, admin'rt- $1 'for men.BeAeV ig experirxes With anew tediffique in gtUMg girls:.Priutd invitafions were sent to

the wsdm dudimen of vAIi1alsurTns at SiMMOM, PRadefff,

arnd BU, to be distrbuted to tIU--

girls. A 1dvugh not xvqex&ed forladmisqion, the Binvitations dimdincrease fthe attractivemess ofthe dance 1to ffe g=r If itproves surue.%U, the poficy

will be oxanded in the tur.Catherine Laboue S c h a o I of

Nuring, n ixe-e in CardirM

Cu~fff g Aufdbrium, C a r n e yUHspltal, 2100 D orwdhter St.,Bostm; %pxnxved by JwiorClEss; $.75) ad , 8-12 pm;Ken Reeves -baud; refredjents.

Katherine Gibbs Sdcol, mixer atZero MwbariUo S (cornper ofMarlblro and Aricka); 8:3D-12 pm, no cbw-g.

Marlbro Hmwe, BU. 'ke Five,wid ARl hlat Jazz," a nfixer;8taxts abouA 7:308 pm, goiuntil n*Wght; tie & jacket, refregnuents; to get in, eitherhave ifittation (they shold beavalaeble at TICA in WalkerMemoriW today or tmormoaw),or know a girq in the house.

The Towers, BU, mixer, 812 pin,invtlaltionol (drivitatibsf ta hav ebeen sent to a number of 4ligroups on campus; cddcl withyour soal dchair .

Simmons, Sq. Darmce, -in AlunmeFfall; fr invitations, cali LO6-9094.

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NOr. 8.Babicork St. (West Cahpus), BU,

nras mde piaay, 8-12 pm, in-

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Wmig RePtbfimm moer- ands-AM-AMC a~ party; in White HIa31,Le9ky CSeg~e; 812 pm, ad-

oission $1; spoywred by cvl-

lege AMUIc~i of Mom. YRC's;rabwt 20 cmems padticipatirg.

Satmuday, Nov. 2

Harvard Gr-adulate Student Asso-k-intion, 812 pm, at ~kwmessCoanimb, H ard U.; GeorgeGrahamn 0rdiestr; Ilacies free,

mren $a or sdWr Grad Schoolavtevity card.

In aadtiiin, there fimudd 'be a

ix alt 'Irlton H91, Jackson, the

weekend eb Howug Arisfce lDay,-

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and arnTo mixer at Mt. Auburn

Hospfital School of Nursirig No

verbeir 15. Acxeqs are yet to be

held at Ermmn (Prdovably an

open house), Frankln Sq. House

(wiatch the bulletin borrds; it'll

be -wesl poste), end Bay State

*Academy (,arhl s6eledfor Nov. 8 weekerkd, now Mbeng re-

schoduled).

Ilhalt may ibe ralil ntril nextyear; if we get more dnfmonationcn the above, bwever, we'll tryto run it next week.

E

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By DDave Trevveft

Ths may we be the List e~l-

u-rn of the season, so we're i-cludimg our aempienpctest of acm-Ing attiactdons:

Fnday, 06L 25

RESTAURNT FRANCAIS

t ^ ~DE'NER- 4> CI 7.9582

- n22 semen St.

Few stop from Copley ,Sq.I RTED WINES

Am*Ofcvr Express Cirdif Card

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~I ~~~~~~~~~~

Or _ ~~~~~~~~~I

GD/FW is currently engaged in many outstanding projects involving

atmospheric and space vehicles and systems. -Energetic, creative

engineers and scientists are needed now, to help solve the intriguing

problems involved in our many ambitious programs. N To take advan,

tage of the opportunities offered, contact your Placement Director, to

determine when a General Dynamics/Fort Worth representative will be

on campus, or write Mr. J. B. Ellis, Industrial Relations Administrator,

Engineering, General Dynamics/Fort Worth, P. O. Box 748, Fort Worth,

Texas. An equal opportunity employer. g

On Campus InterviewsOctober 29, 1963

DYNAMICS I FORT WORTT GlIlIlwID

FiNday, Nov. 1

Brooke ad, BU, a folksingmixer; no cur, 812 pm;there'll Ibe cne Tomn with folk-&iCfg, wand arkter with daww-

ing.

Shelton Hafl, BU; tS one is oTAy

FOR SALE-Siamese Ikitens, pedi-greed. Call after 6 p.m., WA 4-5630.

FOR SALE - 21/ year old Yolks-wagen, excellent condition, radio.seat belts, $1195. Yl 4-0668.

WANTED: collaborator. Topic: so-cial. Approach: conventional--RE-VERSED. Resume: Conner, 339 W.40th St., San Bernardino. Cal.92407.

STEREO SYSTEM FOR SALE: $275.Dynaco Multiplex Tuner; Fisher X-100 Amplifier; Weathers turn table.A__ ,-1 r-arfArclao Heth AR-2IArm ana %Are guys racam Speakers. Phone UN 4-3431.

2 ROOM DUPLEX - Furnished, inNewton Center; knotty pine livingroom, fieldstone fireplace, largegarden, all utilities, heated, park-ing, on bus line, near shopping.Rent $140. LA 7-1159.

Bill: Be sure to ote for JANEICOOPER for J. P. Queen.

TUTORING: Excellent tutoring incollege government, history, andEnglish courses. Reasonable rates.Call or write: Mr. Dukakis. RE 4-5019 or 9 James St.. Brookline.

NEED AT ONCE: Advisors for Con- Iservative Temple Youth. USY ex-perience preferred. VO 2-6578.

1962 CHEVROLET. 4-dr. Bel Airesedan. Has everything. Low mile-age. Excellent condition. M~ay beseen at MIT any weekday. A bar-gain at $1595. Call Rose, Mornings,at Ext. 2566.

HELP WANTED: Male twins. iden-tical or fraternal, for 5-week well-paid psychophysiological researchproject. Please call Dr. BenjaminMurawski, at Peter Bent BrighamHospital, BE 2-8000, Ext. 298 or320.

FOR SALE: Two tickets to MahaliaJackson for Friday night at Donnel-ly Memorial. Cheap. Bill Wilson,x3785, CO 6.2968.

DE�YONE

Laundry

and

Dryelet2 ingIn by 10 AMS

Back by 11 AIM. next day

Academia EspanolaSCHOOL OF LANGUAGESSmall groups and private

instruction.Tel. EL 4-2124 54 Boylston St.(2 blocks fron the Harvard Sq.

MTA Station)

G ENS EFa^L. I

UNICORN JIM KWESKINCOFFEE L JUG BANDHOUSE - OCT. 28 to NOV. 10

_,--------~-1------~--82 ,s . . .- St.

Ruggers outplay Brown for 3rd win

FXMIUWISIF_ ~a lfe~~~~~~v.

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THE HIGHWAYMENSATURDAY, OCT. 26

Kresge 8:30 P.M.Tickets in Building 10

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these threatened continuously throughy the the rest of the game but a stub-of the born Brown defense kept theof the tally at 8 -3.in his Informal Season Opens)All to The ruggers had started theirPollard season October 5 with a 3 - 0 winan 8-3 over a New York Rugby squad.Offense Play in this game was sloppy as

the MIT team had just startedli;~ training, and the New York squadwas composed of mostly second-stringers.

After this rather informal sea-son opener, the rugbyrnen next

(F) 0 met Harvard Business School.Despite the fact (that they hadjust organized their team, the

i1Vesley- Business School held MIT to a3 - 3 deadlock through the first

47 - half. Then, with the wind behindthem in the second half, M I Tswept to a 21- 3 win.

The MIT Rugby team extendedGuest followed up one ofits unbeaten -record to 3- 0 with kicks, and was tackledan 8-3 victory over Brown. last Brown fullback just shortSaturday. The ruggers had pre- line. Bob Donaldson, oneviously beaten the New York several players upfieldRugby Club and Harvard Busi- support, picked up theness School. go over for a try. Ed

Saturday's match was played made the conversion forin brilliant sunshine against a MIT lead. The MITvery energetic Brown 15. Somescrappy play in the opening min- M How They Dinutes gave Brown a successfultry from a line-out near the MIT Soccerline. After this, MIT recovered MIT 2 - Tufts 0and won the majority of serums, MIT 3 - Amherst 1

often pushing the Brown scrum Harvard (F) 4 _ MITright off the ball. she Techmensoon evened the score on a pen- Cross Countryalty kick by Bob Donaldson. Al- MIT 21- B U 49-though MIT had held most of an 62the territorial advantage, half- UNH 28 - Wesleyantime came with the count level. MIT 59

Donaldsona Tally Decisive MIT (F) defeat BUThe MIT forwards doniinated Wesleyan (F) 26 MIT (

play after the intermission, and UNH (F) 54Tech constantly threatened onlong, high kicks upfield. Tim AaeWang

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PerfectFamily and Friends

Mom, Dad and your friends will enjoy the convenienceand comfort of Harvard's most popular Motel. Com-plimentary continental breakfast served daily. Only20 min. from Logan Airport; within easr walk of MTAto downtown Boston.Special ticket service for theatre and sporting events.

Free William B. Corr, InnkeeperParking UNiversity 4-5200

TImps The beam met' its!ehest compeldtior, Norieastern

Univrevety, in the fiast match ofthe season Fridyar nigt and wasdefeated 1301-1241.

Tedh wus fampered by a -latestart with new wvapons Fid thetempraryn loss of two team mem-bers.

Inturauml harriersto run Ntovemboer S

Mue Trarnural Cauxcil vffi.ispoinwr the sood annual IM

Icro6 country meet Tuesday, -No-vem:ber 5. Each team will consistdf five men, and- points wiR be,awarded acc ming to the fits&position. M1e team with the Iow-est number of points will win.

'he amn-se will (onsist of twolaps around the athleltic fieds-About a mile and ,hree quarters.

Northeastem 1301 - AIT 1241

Leo Berard (B.S.M.E., 1'957) joined New England Tele-phone in the fall of 1960 and, within months, was put incharge of an important study to determine the feasibilityof large-scale buried cable operations in Rhode Island.

Develo~ing standards and practices where few previ-ously existed, Leo presented his final reports before top-level management, engineering groups, municipal planners,and Chambers of Commerce throughout Rhode Island.

His initiative in carrying out the study and his abilityto capably represent his company are just two of the traitsthat earned Leo his promotion to Engineer in the PlantExtension Department.

Leo Berard, like many young engineers, is-impatientto make things happen for his company and himself. Thereare few places where such restlessness is more welcomedor rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.

653 MASS. AVE.oCentlk Sq., Cambridge

Open Thursda & Fridav Nightts

[ Donaldson scores twice

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION presentsHANS GMOSER in person, narrating

SK IS OVER McKINLEY8 P.M. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1963

at KRESGE AUDITORIUM

Tickets $1.75 - Student rate 75c - At the door or advance salesby mail - Infernafional Student Assoc., 33 Garden St., Cambridge

MVITl second in wooa regatrtMIT (F) second at Brown

GolfMIT second m' Greater Boston

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THE BELL TELEPHONE COMtPANIESSALUTE: LEO BERARD

BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

TELtPHtN.E SPAN OF-THE NTH-A1TH

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Dooters Leleat luttS, AsDrown stayrs unbeuerBooters Deeat Tufts, Am erst0The Techi sceren reeled off

vctories over Tufts and Amherstthis past week to 'lri their sea-smon eord to three wins, twolosses, aid one tie. After dropping.heir fist two contests, the boot-ers have statred to roll in the 1'ttwo wes.

Tech Whitewashes TuftsM-T scored an early gl to

SC noses out Delta Psiby one point for firstin fall sailing regatta

open tIday, a

lead shErgine

ougsvtbut noturitiesat 1-0.

Prbayperiod,on)ae nand stoseveralscoredTedh dthd -i

Sigma Chi edged Delta Psi by ue vone point to finish first with 69 2nd paints in MIHT's faLl IM saiin re- Playgatta, held October 14-17. Delta the fielPsi was leading until the last day, firt peA

I but ran minto hard luck when their But AnA division skipper was disquaai- attack,J bl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~an rfied for a false start tin the final give

ua rMcoe. Sigma Chi tok two first glve duI places Friday to win the regatta. lied du

Ph Gamma Delta, winer of leavethe regatta for the past three haiftimyears, fnished fourth with 51 MTpoints. They failed to enter sev- soon aerai mceds, but showed up wellin those they did enter. SeniorDbue finied third, entering aU

,races, ibut sailing inconsistertly.Baker House sailed well, 'but werprotested out on two of their A ia,better races. comd

Unfortunately, the first three umphsdays of te regurly sdheduled Phi Dregatta was plagued wi'th light fotbal]winds, maldng a fourth day of as theracing necessary. Forturately the Pi Dewids were moderate on the Sigmafourth day and those who raced divisimthat day enjoyed respectable rae- Theing weather.

The Standings, p1 Sigma Chi 69 title NV2 Delta Psi 6C wtch 3 Lambda Chi Alpha 564 Phi Gantrmuna Delta 51 20-7 de5 Senioar House 49 to play6 AMlpha Epsilon Pi B 497 Baker House 46 downsM Alpha Epsilon Pi A 41 Larsen

9 Burton House 8 40-Td40eiss..,.::.:.~:-- :..:.:.-.~ {::::~:...: ;: ... i:.. Deckck S..... ........ I . ............. S ta e alok

On Deck sooingToday, October 23, '66. Th

Cross Country - Boston Col- ldk slege, Away, 4:00 pm on a sI

Cross Country (F) - Boston ed tlheiCollege, Away, 4:30 pm Hinrid

Saturday, October 26 With siSoccer - Springfield, Away,

11:30 ani But Cross Country - Coast Guard, storme

Away, 2:30 pm on anoCross Country (F) - Coast Delta

Guard, Away, 2:30 pm downsSailing 12 mi

Sailing - White Trophy at DdwriceCoast Guard dirt t(continues ithrough Sunday, againOct 27) PAT.

Sailing (F) - Priddy Trophy the TIat MIT - (continues through clock. Sunday, Oct. 27) ta Ci

* * * 15 secTuesday, October 29 Fk'aMzi

Cross Country- Northeastemrn, d wTufts, Home, 4:00 pm by the

Cross Country (F) - North- this mneastern, Tufts, Home, 4:30 pm ped on

Seek New England crown

he Tft game lst Thurs-cd held off a determinedattadck to nnta5n a 1-0rough the first quarter. Iheers dominatted pyhout the secod quarter,issed their sco'ng oppor-s, leaving the halfhtime taly

was even during the third,but MIr took the offersive

more in the fial quartermnmed the Tft goal. After

1 attempts, the Engieersfor a 2-0 m-gin, 'a-d the

Mlenge held on to preserve;ory.Half Goals Top Amherstseesawed frn one end ofld to the other dimng theaniod of the Amherst game.nherst fouled during a Tech

arid Captain Bob Mehra-made the penalty kick toMIT the lead. Amherst tal-ring the second quaxter tothe teams deadlocked ate.pressed hard andsored

after the halftime break,

Tech's Giovanni Ernmo '65leads Tufts' Bob Lehrman inchase for ball in Thursday's 2-0MIT soccer triumph.

-Photo by George Jelatis

,the heid off an Amherst attackthough e rest of the thirdstanza. Amherst took the offen-sive again in t fourih quarter,but still filed to fimd The goal.MIT died a 3-1 victory with

awfler goa in the f minutes.The Tedhmen sek to continue

ther winnig ways with roadctests against Coast Guard andSprgfield next week.

iL01 /1 I,1vG I UI

fall to UNH,By Dave Kres

Tech's cros,-cmfty sqad eas-ly defated Boston Uiversityarid Brnis n a meet nin overte fouw-mile Frankn P a r kcourse lost Tesday. M sorewa MIT 21, BU 49, and Wes-leyan 62.

Brown First AgainSumner Brown '66 scored his

thrd finst id set the MIT recordfor h course of 19:53, making

his his seconid reord ts year.The rest of the top five scorsfor MIT were Roger Buler '65,3rd at 21:10; ',Rodb Wessn '66, 4thin 21:56; BiR Purves '65, 6th in22:23; and Dick M/Milin '65, 7thin 22:37.

UNH Wins Tangulau MeetHowever, th meet Saturday at

Frakin~ Park was a differentstory as ART was third behindNew Hani e and Wesleyean bya scre of New Haipre 28,Wesileyan 47, id MVIIT 59. TheIse left te squad th a Tec-

ord -of 5-3.

elts ijis, Fijis, Phi Delts rollby Cliff Weinstein

St-mbnute Delta Tau Deltaack and strong shutrot tri-; by Phi GamTma Dla and,ita Theta ighlighted IM

1 action ts past weekel .Delts, the Fdjis, ad the

Alts joined defending champAlpha Epsilon in the A

n semfinrWrl.Delta Tau Delta-Theta

layoff for the League IVvas a seesaw domrabrooksaw the Delts oveme aefidit with just six mimnutesy. The team traded touch-in the first, as Delt Jim

, '65 opend sorig on aI pas reception from Bill

'64, and 'Teta Ci's Peteier '64 gathered in a longg aerial from Tom Franzelieta C broke the 7-7 dead-;om adfter the intermissionhbrt pass play, and exterd-r lead to 20-7 when Dennisis '64 caught a TD pasix mnutens leat in te game.

Safety Decidesa few plays later, the DeltsYd back as Laisen scoredWier kg pass. Delta Tau

kicked off and held onto regain possession. With

nutes 'loft, Dreiss hit Jacke '64 with a 30-yard pay-

oss, and then con edwith Dowe for the tyfgThe Delts kicked off, andhets tried to runm ot theA couple of lises left The-

on their own hree Withonds left. TC qunzberbacki ook the snap from center,as dased into the end zoneDelt ine. Trying to avdid

,h, he inadvertently stelp-the end tie r an auto-

Bill Dreiss '64 carries for Delta Tau Delta as John Schwan-Delts beat Theta Chi 22-20 in

-Photo by John TorodeTheta Delta Ch anid Phi Kappa

Theta made te B semis, -down-ing Tau Epsilon Phi and PiLambda Phi by 7-6 and 33412, e-spectively. The IC game was agt affair which saw TEP miss

seAi scoir~g cdces.

Frosh seorfs

Harriers leaveBy Ctalle Willman

Te f r e s h ma n cr s-countryteamn oed a fint ad a econdplace last week to ontfmue the'rfine fia D oor. In two r Wo Q rmon their home grinds at Frank-lin Park, the hares easiy defated Bost University October15, mid then fusd secn in atiazgulr meet against NewHaEn~ e ard Wesleyan last

Teehmen Take 7 of 10In race againt BU early last

weelk the fro swept seven of theto ten Wti$th a pomint totalof 25. BiR Lwae, Bob Kaman,Eot Adrews, Sam Guilbeau,aMd )Don lRab finiaed 3rd, 4th,5th, 6th and 7th respectively tolead the Tedmcien. The BU teamhad no official tam score. LastSatuaday, Weseyan led with 29points, finsed secondwith 46, and UNH canedni lastwith 54. Andrews, Lmge mid'Kannm ledthe tem owte gain,as they flnied a*y 27 secondsapart in Ihe 3rd, 5h, id 6thispots. The ace, nm on a 2.79mile aomne, was nmked by ht,slugg~i weatmr.

SoccerThe er were iut out

in ear game gIt Harvdlast Sabrday by a sam of 4-0.In a matdih pved u BriggsFEld, f9e Harvard mt n,playing a short pasg game wasto rm for Ihe Tech defense,depite severai gcad ave by Wegoaie Avmm AiAtz.

beck '66 (ripped jersey) blocks.grid contest Saturday.

matic safety, giving the DTD a22-20 win.

TIe FgIs sdred ael teir ptItsn the frst ha5f, then ld on to

dhutout Be Theta Pi 120 in a,replay of last week's overimetilt. Roy Wytteba '65 covmc-ted with ck Mboter '64 for both-tbudidom. FPGD meets IYD ina semifina contest Satz-day at1:30.

The Pai Deltls cdhd theLeague -t title by defeating AlphaEIptsfbn Pi 20-0. Ibs was a bar-fogt Omkest in miich the pen-poilt pasig of PDT qmrteackTom Bsch '66 provided the ee.B'mb hit Denis Sivers '6 inthe 'rd qlrter i a 13-0 lead,

then canneced with Dk Lipes'66 fo the fial taly. ID meetsSgria Eplon Satuday at1:30.

Skippers second in Wood competitionThe Tech skippers followed up last week's -

Oberg Trophy victory with a second plaace amnongfive teams in cxmpeton for the Jack Wood SOA5 T SUCCESSFUL SAILING..Trophy on the Charles, October 13. The sailorsthus entered Ithe qualfying rounds of the NewE n g I a n d Intercollegiate Sailing Associationchampionrip this past weekend with a strongfall record behind them, and good prospects forthis important event.

Thirteen teams are entered in the NEISA meet, to which eight will reach the semi-finals /and four will make tie finals at MITr November9. The qualifying'rounds took place at MIT andat New LDondon, Coannedticut, with the Tedchmensailing at New London. Other hopefuls fbr the -championship include Bowdom, Darltmouth, Har-vard, Williams, Rhode Island Design, Babson,BC, BU, Brown, Rhode Island and Yale. '

The qualifying rounds were marked by vir-tualy windless weaher unortunately becausebrisk weather is needed for a true test of boat-ing skls The results of the qualificalons willbe published in next week's The Tech.

from bigacnpe be []cl 20:01.5, vinnkg by 19 seoj Despite the hot weater, ms --the retof the squd ra etrineg B topwn Butler, i 20W essleyan, 17th in 21:50; _

rehin2:m2; mid Rms ~Ein 22:49.-'

This week the squad wir to get back on the ssig tt =at Boston Cek/lge Wednei BCoast Guard Satu-ay. _

RI beats golfers who take secondin Boston meet _Iesiefiho w, Ed

Tech's golfers dropped their final meet of the season to the University of Rhode Island, 6iv1Y at the Judith Point Co0unyClub in Rhode Island. After theregular season closed, a Tedhseven - man link squad finwaedsecond in the Greater B o s t o Collegiate Meet Monday, Oct -ber 14.

Pete Lubitz, '65, represetedTech at the Eastern CollegiteIAthletic Conference Toumarne _at Bethpage, Long Island, Octo.ber 18 and 19, and finished sev. -enth among all scorers.

John Eck, '64, scored Tecspoint against Rhode Isln A

when he tied his opponent. LOW Iscore for the Engineers was a 79by Dick Shoemaker, '66.

The Techmen gained a tie for-second place with Harvard in theGreater Boston meet. Techsteam score was 630 which consst.!ed of the best five individua,scores. Lubitz finished third inthe individual competiton wita 117 over the 27- hole course

Lubitz Seventh EIn the 18 -hole ECAC Torna

ment, Chip Romano, from Amy,was the winner of the individuacompetition as he set a couerecord of 68. Lubitz, Tech 's yentry, tied for seventh with a'7. Colgate took the tournament wia a team score of 311, while Navywas runner-up with 314. The TECH squad did not qualify fi the team competition.

BU far behindThe tu~i sailors continued -

1their fine season with a goodshowing in an octagonal at BrSurday, October 13 th. The tlascoredi an ipressive secot pla behind Tfts, and they wil g.ae ath desre n in- a-a erd ce at them la

eagail wich is slated for fosweek at Hy Cross.

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